California Rolls
I am introducing American-born Japanese food, the California Roll. Featuring colorful fillings like avocado, crabmeat, and with decorations on the outside, too. Enjoy making them!
- 1/2 avocado
- Lemon juice
- 70 g crabmeat
- 100 g fresh fish such as tuna or salmon or squid
- 10 shiso leaves(or basil leaves)
- 3 sheets of nori(seaweed)
- 1 egg and a pinch of salt
- Toasted sesame seeds
- Wasabi paste, to taste
- Soy sauce, to taste
- 600 g freshly cooked rice
- 3 tbsp rice vinegar
- 2 tbsp sugar
- 2 tsp salt
- 3 sheets nori
- Cut the avocado into 1 cm-wide slice, then squeeze lemon juice over it to prevent browning.
- Cut the fresh fish into 1 cm-wide strip.
- Make Sushi rice. Mix the vinegar, sugar and salt together, then sprinkle over the freshly cooked rice. Mix in with a cutting motion to make sushi rice.
- Place a sheet of nori on a sushi mat (or on a thick cooking towel), then evenly spread sushi rice across it, leaving about 1.5 cm at the top of the nori.
- Place plastic wrap on top of the spread sushi rice, then flip over the sushi rice and nori. Place the fish and avocado, crabmeat on the bottom third of the nori.
- Tightly roll up the nori and sushi rice while pressing in on the fillings.
- Roll it up the rest of the way. When you get to the end, squeeze it gently to even out the shape, then wrap in plastic wrap.
- Make an egg sheet. Mix egg egg with salt, then spread evenly in a heated frying pan. When the surface of the omelet becomes dry and the edges start to turn up, remove the egg crepe, by hand. Rap one roll with the egg sheet.
- For other rolls, sprinkle the roll with sesame seeds or rap with big shiso (basil)leaves.
- Wrap the rolls in kitchen wrap once more, then slice them (still wrapped) with a sharp knife into 1.5 cm-thick slices.
- Remove the plastic wrap and arrange to serve, with soy sauce and wasabi on the side.
- The portion of the nori left without sushi rice on it is meant to serve as a "tab" to make the final rolling cleaner and easier!
Clam and Burdock Root Rice
Littleneck clams are in season right now in Japan! Ordinarily, when cooking rice, you cook one part rice with 1.1 parts water. In this case, though, burdock root and clams provide moisture, so you’ll start with 1:1 rice water, then, remove the volume of the seasonings from the amount of water used.
- 360 ml short-grain rice
- 300 ml water
- 100 g chicken thigh
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 cup minced burdock root or carrot
- 2 cups asari clams or steamer clams
- 2 tbsp soy sauce
- 1 tbsp sake
- 1 tsp sesame oil
- 5 shiso leaves
- Wash the rice, then let rest in a strainer for 30 minutes. Soak the burdock roots in water.
- Put the rice, water and seasonings in a pot, then sprinkle with the chopped burdock root, clams, and ground chicken on top.
- Cover and heat on high. When it now comes to a boil, reduce heat to low and cook for 13 minutes.
- When it finishes cooking, gently stir the rice together and portion in individual bowls.
- Top with chopped shiso and serve.
Deep-fried shrimp
We love fried foods. fried chicken, fried scallops, fried vegetables, we just love them together with great Japanese beer. For making this, it would be best to find Japanese Panko. Now it is sold on the net, and it is worth trying. You will love this.
- 12 shrimp, thawed if frozen
- salt for rinsing shrimp (about 1tsp)
- salt and pepper
- 1/2 cup Flour (or Tempura flour)
- 1 to 2 eggs, beaten
- 1 cup Bread crumbs
- 1 cups vegetable oil, for deep-frying
- lemon wedges (small lime is fine)
- Peel the shrimp, leaving the tail intact. Rub with salt, and rinse in cold water to get rid of the fishy smell.
- Dry the surface of the shrimp, and sprinkle with salt and pepper.
- Batter in this order: flour (Tempura flour), beaten eggs, and breadcrumbs.
- Fry the shrimp in 170 degree Celsius oil until golden brown.
- Then arrange on a plate, along with the lemon wedges.
- It's fine to use ordinary flour for the batter, but if you can find and use tempura flour for this recipe, it'll produce a crispier end result. Dip in to the mayonnaise or soy sauce.