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Dashi

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Mushrooms wrapped in cheesecloth being strained over a glass pot of dashi.
Photo by Yuki Sugiura

This is the most common dashi recipe (for non-vegetarians). It uses both kombu and katsuobushi (bonito flakes) together for an umami-rich dashi with a complex, deep flavor. The first brew or batch is called 一番だし (ichiban dashi) because you're able to reuse the kombu and katsuobushi to make a weaker-flavored (but still tasty) dashi, referred to as 二番だし (niban dashi). Ichiban dashi has a refined, clean flavor, is perfect for clear soups, egg dishes or noodles in broth where the dashi is the primary flavor, while niban dashi is more suitable in something where another ingredient is the primary flavor, like miso soup

For a vegetarian dashi, click through for a recipe starring kombu and dried shiitake mushrooms.

This recipe was excerpted from 'Atsuko's Japanese Kitchen' by Atsuko Ikeda. Buy the full book on Amazon. Get a few of our favorite Japanese soup recipes →

What you’ll need

Recipe information

  • Yield

    Makes 3⅓ cups

Ingredients

1 quart cold water
10 g (2 x 4-inch) piece of kombu
20 g katsuobushi (bonito flakes)

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Place the water and kombu in a large saucepan and leave to soak for at least 30 minutes.

    Step 2

    After 30 minutes, start to gently bring the water to the boil over a medium-high heat. Just before it reaches boiling point—when small bubbles appear at the bottom of the pan—remove the kombu and continue heating. Once boiling, turn the heat off and sprinkle the katsuobushi (bonito flakes) into the kombu dashi. Leave to brew for 2 minutes, letting the flakes sink to the bottom of the pan.

    Step 3

    Strain the dashi through a muslin/cheesecloth or paper towel-lined fine-mesh sieve/strainer, letting it drip through. The finished dashi will keep in the refrigerator in a sealed container for up to 3 days.

Atsuko's Japanese Kitchen-COVER
From Atsuko’s Japanese Kitchen: Home-Cooked Comfort Food Made Simple by Atsuko Ikeda, published by Ryland Peters & Small. Buy the full book from Amazon or Ryland Peters & Small.
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