OZONI (JAPANESE NEW YEAR MOCHI SOUP - KANTO STYLE)
Ozoni (Japanese New Year Mochi Soup) is one of the popular Osechi Ryori dishes. This clear dashi based mochi soup with chicken and seasonal vegetables is enjoyed in Kanto region (Eastern Japan).
Provided by Namiko Chen
Categories Soup
Time 30m
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Gather all the ingredients.
- Cut the chicken into bite-size pieces and put them in a small bowl, add ¼ tsp kosher salt.
- Add 1 Tbsp sake and mix well with hands. Let the chicken marinated for 15 minutes.
- Meanwhile, blanch the komatsuna or spinach in boiling water and cook until tender (do not overcook). Soak in iced water after removing from pot to stop cooking further.
- Squeeze the water out and cut the komatsuna into 1 ½ inch (3 cm) length.
- Make a knot with each mitsuba's stem. Peel the yuzu skin.
- If there is too much pith (the white fuzzy thing) was removed along with yuzu's skin, trim with knife. Julienne the yuzu peel very thinly.
- Add 4 cups (960 ml) dashi in a large saucepan or pot and bring it to boil. Once boiling, add the chicken pieces.
- Once all the chicken is added, cover to cook for 5-7 minutes, depending on the size of chicken.
- Once the chicken is cooked, skim the foam and fat on the surface.
- Add 1 Tbsp sake, 1 Tbsp soy sauce, and 1 tsp kosher salt. Mix well and keep it on simmer.
- When everything else is ready, start toasting mochi in a toaster oven. Optionally you can do this on a frying pan or oven as well.
- Serve the chicken and soup, add the mochi and komatsuna, and finally topped with mitsuba and yuzu. Enjoy immediately.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 216 kcal, Carbohydrate 28 g, Protein 9 g, Fat 7 g, SaturatedFat 2 g, TransFat 1 g, Cholesterol 39 mg, Sodium 563 mg, Fiber 1 g, Sugar 26 g, UnsaturatedFat 4 g, ServingSize 1 serving
OZONI (MOCHI SOUP)
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
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.
NEW YEAR'S DAY OZONI SOUP
Ozoni soup is traditionally eaten on New Year's Day in Japan. The literal translation means a variety of ingredients boiled together.
Provided by lilbrngal
Categories Soups, Stews and Chili Recipes Soup Recipes
Time 1h12m
Yield 4
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- Place mushrooms in a bowl and cover with warm water; let soak, about 15 minutes. Drain and squeeze out water from mushrooms; slice.
- Set oven rack about 6 inches from the heat source and preheat the oven's broiler on high. Place mochi on a baking sheet.
- Broil mochi, turning frequently, until inflated, crisp, and slightly browned, about 5 minutes. Cut into 1-inch strips.
- Combine water and dashi-no-moto in a large saucepan; bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer until dashi is dissolved, 2 to 3 minutes. Add chicken, soy sauce, and salt; simmer until chicken is no longer pink in the center, about 15 minutes.
- Mix shrimp, mushrooms, spinach, carrots, daikon radish, and bamboo shoots into chicken mixture; simmer until vegetables are tender and shrimp is cooked through, about 10 minutes.
- Divide mochi strips among 4 bowls and top with soup. Garnish soup with kamaboko slices.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 347.8 calories, Carbohydrate 63.5 g, Cholesterol 63.4 mg, Fat 1.7 g, Fiber 6.4 g, Protein 20.5 g, SaturatedFat 0.4 g, Sodium 189.1 mg, Sugar 3.4 g
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