Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Quick and Easy Japanese Meal

This isn't properly a recipe of any sort. Instead, it is just a quick and easy meal of the type you will rarely find here--one with mostly pre-prepared ingredients. It is simple, fast and easy--it should be done in under 15 minutes. It is a good summer meal, too, as except for your bowl of miso soup these are all cool or cold dishes!

Here's your menu!

Yomainma Soba with Wasabi
White Miso with Shiitake and Tofu
Mixed Greens with
Wasabi-Miso Vinaigrette
Fresh Watermelon


Yomainma Soba-->Buckwheat Soba Noodles with Yam

These prepared noodles, imported by JFC International, have just four ingredients: wheat flour, buckwheat flour, yam and salt. These cost less than $3 a bag. If you don't have a store nearby that carries them, you can order them online. You can get them in bulk from a vendor here or can buy individual packages here.

With only 210 calories per serving (5 per bag) and 10 grams of protein, they are perfect to complete a meal with some soy. Simply put into boiling water and cook 6-8 minutes. After cooking, rinse under cold water--these are not served hot. Then, set them aside to drip dry for a few minutes before dishing. I actually put them into a pot of ice water for a few minutes after rinsing them before straining and allowing them to drip.

When dishing, add a little wasabi--to taste, but at least 1/4 inch per serving--and a splash of soy sauce. Mix well and serve with the rest of this meal.

White Miso with Shiitake Mushrooms and Tofu

You need to prepare for this before by soaking your dried mushroom for twenty minutes beforehand in cool water (if using fresh shiitakes, then no need, of course). You just need 1 mushroom for every two servings. Remove, slice as thinly as you can manage, and add to your water. Take extra firm tofu and slice into 1"x 1" squares and set aside.

You want to bring your water to a near boil, remove from heat and stir in your miso paste (follow the directions of your miso. I recommend paste, not dried miso, as the paste is more likely to be all natural). After you've stirred in your miso to where it has mostly dissolved, return to heat at very low--you do not want your miso soup to come to a boil. You can now add your tofu.

Another way to make this soup is to also add very small potato squares, but this time peeled. You'll have to boil your potatoes beforehand, though, as you don't want to let your miso cook so long. Adding nori, or seaweed, is also a great addition to this recipe. I used to have this with my breakfast when I lived in Japan.

Salad with Wasabi-Miso Vinaigrette

This is easy enough--just make the vinaigrette recipe in the last blog entry, serve over mixed lettuce or greens (avoid too much iceberg as it has nearly no nutrition). Add whatever you normally enjoy in your salad, and the faint hints of wasabi and miso will help tie this simple but elegant meal all together!


Watermelon!

I served with with two cups of fresh watermelon as a dessert. At only about 90 calories and with plenty of nutritional value (vitamins A and C), it was a nice cold end to this pleasant warm weather meal.


Here is the nutritional information for each person:
415 Calories, 7 grams of fat (5 from soy), 19 grams protein

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