Best 3 Junes Ozoni Recipes

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Junes ozoni, also known as Junsai Ozoni, is a traditional Japanese soup dish enjoyed during the New Year holidays. It is a simple yet flavorful soup made with a clear broth, mochi (glutinous rice cakes), vegetables, and junsai, a type of aquatic plant native to Japan. Junsai is characterized by its delicate, crunchy texture and mild flavor, adding a unique touch to the soup. The combination of ingredients in junes ozoni symbolizes good luck and prosperity, making it a popular dish to bring in the new year. With its light and refreshing taste, junes ozoni is a delightful way to celebrate the arrival of the new year and enjoy the company of loved ones.

Let's cook with our recipes!

OZONI (MOCHI SOUP)



Ozoni (Mochi Soup) image

People in Japan and the Japanese diaspora hold mochi-making parties in late December, taking turns swinging an enormous mallet, pounding sticky rice in a hollowed-out stump until smooth and stretchy, then shaping it into balls or disks. Some of the mochi is eaten fresh with sweet or savory toppings, and some is offered plain to the spirits. (Stores sell it for anyone too busy to make it.) On New Year's Day, hardened mochi pieces are reheated and used in ozoni soup. In Kyoto, round vegetables and mochi bob around in a pale miso soup; in Tokyo, rectangular mochi is served in shoyu broth; in Kanazawa, people add multicolored mochi and sweet shrimp to clear dashi; and in Fukui, it's red miso soup with mochi and nothing else. This recipe, from Corinne Nakagawa Gooden, originates in Hiroshima, and came to Seattle with her grandmother Hisaye Sasaki in the early 1900s.

Provided by Hannah Kirshner

Categories     soups and stews, appetizer, main course

Time 1h

Yield 8 servings

Number Of Ingredients 8

1 pound chicken wings, necks, feet or meaty bones
1 1/2 teaspoons fine sea salt, plus more as needed
3 tablespoons mirin
4 golf ball-size or 2 egg-size satoimo (taro root)
3 ounces mizuna (about 4 cups), roots trimmed and discarded, stems and leaves cut into 2-inch lengths
8 to 16 (¼-inch-thick) slices Naruto kamaboko (red-and-white spiraled fishcake)
1 yuzu or Meyer lemon
8 pieces plain mochi (see Note)

Steps:

  • Make the chicken stock: Rinse the chicken parts. In a pot, bring the chicken, 1 1/2 teaspoons salt and 2 quarts water to a simmer over medium-high heat. Continue to cook at a low simmer for 30 minutes, reducing the heat as needed to prevent a full boil (which would cloud the broth).
  • Strain the broth and discard the chicken or reserve the meat for another use. Add the mirin to the broth and set aside.
  • Bring a medium saucepan of water to a boil. Add the satoimo and blanch until the skin is soft enough to slip off easily, about 3 minutes. Drain the satoimo, then use a spoon to scrape off the skin. Slice the satoimo into ¼-inch-thick rounds, then transfer them to a small saucepan. Add enough of the chicken broth to cover. Bring to a boil over high, then reduce the heat to simmer until soft, about 15 minutes.
  • In lacquerware soup bowls or other small bowls, neatly arrange mizuna, satoimo and 1 or 2 slices of Naruto. Peel one or two long strips from the yuzu, then cut the strips very thinly crosswise. In a medium saucepan, reheat the chicken stock. Taste and adjust salt as needed.
  • To serve, heat the mochi until puffy and soft, for a few minutes in a toaster oven or under the broiler, or 30 seconds on high in a microwave, and add it to the bowls. Immediately ladle about 1/2 cup hot broth into each bowl - before the mochi hardens - and garnish with a pinch of yuzu peel.

OZONI



Ozoni image

Japanese New Year's one-pot meal. Dashi, soy sauce, mochi (packed rice cake), and chicken are fundamental ingredients. Add your own choice of vegetables. This a very simple and delicious hearty one pot meal that'll feed 4.

Provided by Chunkeebeef

Categories     One Dish Meal

Time 40m

Yield 4 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 11

4 tablespoons dashi powder or 1/2 cup dried kelp
400 g chicken breasts or 400 g chicken thighs
1 large daikon radishes or 2 large turnips
1 Chinese cabbage
2 large leeks
2 medium carrots
1/4 cup fresh trefoil (mitsuba) or 1/4 cup fresh coriander leaves
15 snow peas
8 halved dried shiitake mushrooms
8 mochi rice cakes
3/4 cup soy sauce

Steps:

  • Soak shiitake in a bowl of lukewarm water.
  • Chop daikon and chinese cabbage in 3 inch pieces.
  • Cut leeks in 2 inch diagonal pieces.
  • Cut carrots thinly in 2 inch long diagonal pieces.
  • Roughly chop mitsuba leaves.
  • Top and tail snow peas.
  • Cut chicken into 2 inch pieces.
  • In a large pan, boil 10 cups or so of water.
  • Add dashi (unless you have dried kelp, in which case boil the kelp to make dashi manually, then remove after 5 mins).
  • Add shiitake and the water in which they were soaking.
  • Add vegetables that take longer to cook first: daikon, radish.
  • Proceed to add the rest of the vegetables and chicken, leaving peas and mitsuba till last minute so they don't lose their colour.
  • After 15 minutes or so, add mochi and soy sauce.
  • Once mochi is soft and gooey, the zoni is ready to serve.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 353.3, Fat 10.2, SaturatedFat 2.8, Cholesterol 64, Sodium 3183.5, Carbohydrate 36.2, Fiber 5.2, Sugar 6.8, Protein 30.5

JUNE'S OZONI



JUNE'S OZONI image

Categories     Chicken

Number Of Ingredients 8

4 skinless chicken breasts
2 to 4 dried scallops (optional)
1 1/2 cups carrots, peeled and sliced into 2-inch strips
1 1/2 cups daikon, peeled and sliced into 2-inch strips
1 cup mizuna
1 package red kamaboko (fish cake) Yamasa brand
1 package mochi (pounded rice cake)
Salt to taste

Steps:

  • - Cook chicken breasts in 8 cups of boiling water and 2 teaspoon salt for 10 minutes. Lower heat and cook for about 30 minutes. - Wash and drain all vegetables. Cut mizuna into 2 strips (you won't need much, just to add green color). Slice the kamaboko thin. Put a few mochi into toaster and toast until puffy. - Remove chicken and set on a plate, strain soup in a cheesecloth to another pot - Add carrots and daikon and cook until tender (10-15 minutes) - Shred 1 breast of chicken - Add mizuna right before serving, parboil - Put mochi in serving bowl, pour in soup and add kamaboko

Tips:

  • Use a variety of vegetables. This will give your ozoni a more complex flavor and texture. Some good choices include carrots, daikon radish, burdock root, and spinach.
  • Don't be afraid to experiment with different ingredients. Ozoni is a very versatile dish, so you can add or remove ingredients to suit your taste. Some popular additions include chicken, pork, tofu, and shiitake mushrooms.
  • Simmer the ozoni for at least 30 minutes. This will allow the flavors to meld and develop. If you're short on time, you can cook the ozoni for a shorter amount of time, but it won't be as flavorful.
  • Serve the ozoni hot. This is the traditional way to eat it, and it's the best way to enjoy the flavors.
  • Garnish the ozoni with green onions and nori seaweed. This will add a pop of color and flavor to your dish.

Conclusion:

Ozoni is a delicious and versatile dish that can be enjoyed by people of all ages. It's a great way to use up leftover vegetables, and it's also a healthy and nutritious meal. If you're looking for a new and exciting soup to try, give ozoni a try. You won't be disappointed!

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