Chilled grilled eggplant soup for a hot summer's day 
        
       
               
      A refreshing chilled summertime soup using eggplants or aubergines and fresh ginger.
 
 
        
    
      
            Submitted by maki on 25 April, 2013 - 16:37    
  
  
                  
Now that you know how to gut, bone and clean sardines, one of the nicest ways to eat the sardines is to turn them into little fish balls which can be floated in a hot pot, pan-fried, and so on - or most classically, served in a clear soup. The ginger and onion takes away any kind of 'fishy' taste. You can even serve this in cold soup for a refreshing change. (Warning: Not many fish guts below but there is a lot of raw fish!) 
                  Type: 
                  
recipe                  Filed under: 
                  
japanese                soup                fish                washoku                japanesecooking101         
      
  
  
 
        
    
      
            Submitted by maki on 6 March, 2013 - 16:06    
  
  
                  
Now that you know how to make a proper dashi, you're 90% on your way to making delicious miso soup and clear soup. If you have ever wondered why your miso soup doesn't taste quite right, and you were omitting the dashi part...you're in for a treat!
                  Type: 
                  
recipe                  Filed under: 
                  
soup                miso                washoku                japanesecooking101         
      
  
  
 
  
  
              
A very simple creamy soup, made with a quintessentially Japanese spring vegetable, bamboo shoot or takenoko. 
                  Filed under: 
                  
japanese                soup                spring                vegetarian                yohshoku                gluten-free      
 
  
  
              
Recipes abound in print and online for Soupe au Pistou, a bean and vegetable soup that is a Provençal classic. Mine is not much different from the rest, but it's here because I love it so much. It reminds me of why I wanted to move here in the first place. When a pot of Soupe au Pistou is simmering away on our crappy hotplate (yes, it can be made on a hotplate) it makes my continuing kitchenless state somewhat tolerable. A big bowl warms me up  when the temperature drops to the single digits celsius, and the chill seeps into this old stone house from all the gaping gaps in the doorways and windows and walls.
I make it around this time of year with fresh, undried beans - coco blanc and coco rouge - that we can buy at the markets here. They are so gorgeous, before and after shelling. However, it's probably a lot easier for most people to get a hold of dry beans so the recipe calls for them. If you can get fresh beans, just use a tad more - 3 cups total - and skip the soaking and pre-cooking part.
For the first time on Just Hungry, I've included a Japanese version of the recipe too. This is mainly for my mom and aunt to read, but take a look if you are studying Japanese - or point your Japanese friends to it. It is not a translation of the English, but a version specifically for making this soup in Japan.
                  Filed under: 
                  
soup                legumes                fall                vegetarian                french                provence                favorites                vegan                gluten-free      
 
  
  
              
It's been a cold and snowy winter so far around these parts, which usually means soups and stews for dinner. This classic Japanese soup is hearty yet low in calories, full of fiber, and just all around good for you. It helps to counteract all the cookies and sweets you might be indulging in at this time of year.
The name kenchinjiru (けんちん汁)derives from the Zen Buddhist temple where it was first made (or so it's claimed), Kencho-ji (建長寺)in Kamakura. (Kamakura (鎌倉) was, for a brief while, the capital of Japan in the 12th and 13th centuries. Nowadays it's a major historical tourist attraction, and a fairly easy day trip from central Tokyo.) Since kenchinjiru is a shojin ryouri or temple cuisine dish, the basic version given here is vegan. It's still very filling because of all the high fiber vegetables used. You could make a very satisfying vegan meal just from this soup and some brown rice.
                  Filed under: 
                  
japanese                lighter                soup                winter                vegetarian                favorites                vegan                washoku                shojin      
 
  
  
              
We left Provence this week for a little trip to the Midi-Pyrénées in the southwestern part of France. We've been trying to save money by cooking at home most of the time since we started our nomadic existence in France (see previously; not that that's much of a hardship, since the produce and other foodstuffs in Provence are spectacular). But this week we've been staying in an apartment in a 17th century townhouse right around the corner from the Toulouse-Lautrec Museum in the heart of Albi, the capital of the Tarn Department. Since there are tons of great little restaurants here, we've been indulging ourselves a bit.
                  Filed under: 
                  
food travel                soup                vegetables                summer                france      
 
  
  
              
This rich fusion-esque soup is something I just came up with  while fiddling around with the idea of a bisque-like soup without any cream or milk in it. It is fairly frugal despite its richness.
                  Filed under: 
                  
soup                winter                fish                favorites                gluten-free                asian      
 
  
  
              
These days, the house generally looks like a warzone because of the packing, and I am not in the mood for involved cooking. So I'm making very simple bentos, and mostly  one-dish/one-pot type of things for dinner. A great one-pot meal is soup of course, but it is also summer, when we aren't always in the mood for a steaming hot bowlful.
The answer is chilled soup that can be made ahead and just taken out at dinnertime. This one is really easy to make too, which is a big plus. Winter melon has a inherently cooling quality according to old (Chinese) medicine, so this is really nice to have on a warm evening.
                  Filed under: 
                  
japanese                soup                summer                seafood      
 
  
  
              
As I've stated many times here over the years, the basis of most Japanese savory foods is a good dashi, or stock. Dashi is not just used for soups, it's used for stewing, in sauces, batters, and many, many other things.
The regular way to make dashi was one of my first entries on Just Hungry. It uses kombu seaweed and dried bonito flakes (katsuobushi). Some people use niboshi, small dried fish, in addition to or instead of bonito flakes.
Katsuobushi and niboshi are both fish-based, so not vegetarian. So how do you make a good vegetarian, even vegan, dashi?
                  Filed under: 
                  
basics                japanese                soup                vegetarian                vegan      
 
Pages