Traditional Miso Soup
A classic, comforting Japanese soup with dashi, miso paste, tofu, and seaweed.
Ingredients
- •4 cups Water
- •4x4 inch piece Kombu (dried kelp)
- •1/2 cup Katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes)
- •3-4 tablespoons Awase Miso Paste (or white/shiro miso)
- •1 block (12-14 oz), cut into 1/2-inch cubes Silken or Soft Tofu
- •2 tablespoons Dried Wakame Seaweed
- •2 stalks, thinly sliced Green Onions (scallions)
Instructions
- 1.
Prepare the Dashi: In a medium pot, combine 4 cups of water and the kombu. Bring the water to just under a boil over medium heat (small bubbles should form around the edges). Remove the kombu just before it boils.
- 2.
Add the katsuobushi to the hot water. Turn off the heat immediately and let it steep for 5 minutes. Strain the dashi through a fine-mesh sieve into a clean pot, discarding the katsuobushi. This is your dashi broth.
- 3.
While the dashi steeps, rehydrate the wakame seaweed: Place the dried wakame in a small bowl and cover with warm water. Let it soak for 5 minutes until it expands and softens. Drain the wakame, gently squeeze out any excess water, and chop into smaller pieces if necessary.
- 4.
Gently heat the dashi broth over low-medium heat. Do not let it come to a rolling boil.
- 5.
In a small bowl, scoop out about 1/2 cup of the warm dashi broth. Add the miso paste to this small bowl and whisk until the miso is completely dissolved and smooth. This prevents clumps in the soup.
- 6.
Pour the dissolved miso mixture back into the pot with the remaining dashi broth, stirring gently to combine. Ensure the heat is low; the soup should be warm, not boiling.
- 7.
Add the cubed tofu and rehydrated wakame to the soup. Heat for another 1-2 minutes, just until the ingredients are warmed through. Again, do not boil the soup after adding the miso.
- 8.
Ladle the Traditional Miso Soup into individual serving bowls. Garnish each bowl generously with thinly sliced green onions before serving immediately.
Tips
- 💡Never boil miso soup after adding the miso paste. Boiling destroys the delicate flavor of the miso and can diminish the beneficial probiotics.
- 💡Adjust the amount of miso paste to your personal preference. Miso varieties can vary in saltiness and intensity, so taste and adjust.
- 💡For convenience, you can use dashi powder (1-2 teaspoons dissolved in 4 cups of hot water) instead of making dashi from scratch, though scratch-made dashi offers a superior flavor.
- 💡Experiment with different types of miso, such as white (shiro) miso for a sweeter, milder flavor, or red (aka) miso for a richer, saltier taste.
- 💡For added texture and flavor, you can include thinly sliced mushrooms (like shiitake) or a few pieces of daikon radish when heating the dashi.
Recipe from TheCookbook.ai
Created by Shannon Williams