SUSHI GLOSSARY
As with many international cuisines, Sushi comes with it's own
lexicon of intriguing, but sometimes confusing words. Here, we've
compiled a list from many sources that we hope will make your
dining experience more enjoyable.
AMAZAKE
A sweetener or refreshing drink made from cooked sweet rice and
koji starter that has fermented into a thick liquid. Also spelled
amasake.
ARAME
A mild-tasting sea vegetable that is similar to hijiki. Arame is
a brown algae that grows in deep waters. Rich in iron, calcium,
and other minerals, arame is often cooked with sweet root vegetables
and served as a side dish.
ASPERGILLUS
A specific group of molds used to inoculate beans and grains to
make koji, Aspergillus is the starter for many Japanese fermented
foods.
AZUKI BEANS
Small, dark red beans. Especially good when cooked with kombu and
winter squash. This bean is also spelled adzuki or aduki.
BANCHA TEA
Japan's coarse summer tea leaves that are sold as lower-quality
green tea.
BENTO
Meal served with internal dividers, laquered wooden box.
BIFUN NOODLES
Light, transparent noodles made from rice flour and potato starch.
BULLDOG SAUCE
The leading brand of tonkatsu sauce.
BURDOCK
A hardy plant that grows wild and is cultivated throughout the US
as well as Japan. The long, dark burdock root is delicious in soups,
stews, and vegetable dishes. It is highly valued in macrobiotic
diets for its strengthening qualities. Burdock's Japanese name is
gobo.
CALPIS
A sweet soft drink derived from milk, that's similar in taste to
barley water, dilute to taste and serve icecold.
CHA
The japanese word for tea.
CHA-NO-YU
The Zen Buddhist tea ceremony.
CHAWAN-MUSHI
A savoury egg custard served in a tea tumbler (chawan).
CHIRASHI SUSHI
Sushi format, raw sliced fish scattered on top of the rice.
DAIKON
A long, white radish, often grated or cut into fine strips. Daikon
helps dissolve stagnant fat deposits that have accumulated in the
body. Freshly grated raw daikon is especially helpful in the digestion
of oily foods.
DASHI
An all-purpose stock for soups and simmered dishes usually made
with kombu (a type of seaweed) and flavoured with dried shiitake
or bonito (a type of tuna) flakes.
DOBIN-MUSHI
A variety of morsels (prawn, fish,chicken, shiitake, gingko nuts)
in a gently-flavoured fish-stock based soup, steamed (mushi) and
served in a clay tea-pot (dobin).
DONBURI
A bowl of boiled rice with various toppings, such as beef, chicken,
egg.
ERITADENINE
A substance found in shiitake that lowers blood cholesterol.
FU
A dried wheat-gluten product. Available in thin sheets or thick
round cakes, fu is a satisfying high-protein food used in soups,
stews and vegetable dishes.
FUKI
Bog rhubarb.
FUTO MAKI
Thick rolls of rice filled with a mix of vegetables and raw fish
and rolled in nori.
GARI
Pickled ginger, usually pink and thinly sliced. Served with sushi
to cleanse the palate between courses.
GOHAN
Rice.
GYOKURO
Japan's rarest, most expensive tea, Gyokuro is made from the tender
first tea leaves of spring.
GYOZA
Soft pastry cases stuffed with spiced pork and herbs, broadly similar
to ravioli, or some types of chinese dim sum. They are cooked by
a combination of frying and steaming, and usually eaten as an accompaniment
to ramen noodle dishes.
HASHI
Chopsticks.
HIJIKI
A dark, brown sea vegetable that turns black when dried, hijiki
has a spaghetti-like consistency. It is stronger-tasting than arame.
and is very high in protein,calcium and iron. Also spelled hiziki.
HOJICHA TEA
A Japanese tea made from roasted coarse leaves and stems.
KAISEKI
A traditional Japanese meal consisting of a series of small,seasonal
dishes,each resembling an appetizer both in size and beauty of presentation.
Natural,hand-crafted serving-ware is carefully chosen to complement
the season, the food, and the food's arrangement. Like the tea ceremony.
kaiseki was initially a formal, highly refined, spiritual discipline
marked by the Zen ideals of simplicity, harmony, and restraint.
KATA DOFU
A firm, coarse type of tofu.
KATSU
Breaded and deep-fried meat, hence tonkatsu (pork katsu) and katsu
curry (tonkatsu or chicken katsu with rice in a curry sauce).
KOJI
Grains or beans inoculated with Aspergillus mold and used as a starter
for most Japanese fermented foods,including miso, tamari, shoyu,
amazake, mirin and rice vinegar.
KOMBU
A wide, thick,dark green sea vegetable that is rich in minerals.Kombu
is often cooked with beans and vegetables. A single piece may be
used two or three times to flavour a soup stock.
KORI DOFU
Tofu that has been dehydrated by a natural freezing and drying process
Also called snow-dried dofu.
KOYA DOFU
A form of snow-dried tofu that has been dehydrated in a heated shed.
KUKICHA TEA
A Japanese tea made from roasted tea twigs and stems.
KURO-SU
The Japanese name for brown rice-vinegar.Kuro-su is valued for ist
high concentration of essential amino acids,its medicinal qualities,
and its mellow taste.
KUZU
A white starch made from the root of the wild kazu plant. It is
used in making soups,sauces,desserts, and medicinal beverages.
MAKI
Sushi format, rolled piece of rice filled with raw fish (tekka maki
- tuna, sake maki - salmon) or vegetables like cucumber (kappa maki),
wrapped in nori and cut into four to six handsome pieces.
MATCHA
The jade green powdered tea used in the Japanese tea ceremony.
MIRIN
Sweet rice wine traditionally made by a complex destillation and
double-fermentation process. Used in cooking as a high-quality sweetener
and seasoning.
MISO
A protein-rich, fermented bean paste made from soybeans,usually
with the addition of barley or brown or white rice. Miso is used
in soup stocks and as a seasoning.It comes in a wide variety of
styles from white to red, from slightly sweet to very salty and
earthy, and crunchy or smooth.
MISOSHIRU
Classic miso soup with pieces of beancurd. Drink it from the bowl,
and eat the beancurd with chopsticks.
MIZU AME
Rice malt.
MOCHI
A heavy rice cake or dumpling made from cooked, pounded sweet rice.
Mochi is said to be good for lactating mothers, as it promotes the
production of breast milk. Mochi can be made at home or purchased
ready-made.
MOROMI
The thick slurry of fermenting koji and other ingredients that forms
during the brewing process of soy sauce , sake , and mirin.
MUGWORT
A mineral-rich herb that is dried and used a medicinal tea. Dried
ground mugwort is also added to mochi and soba noodles.
MURO
A uniquely constructed room used to incubate koji.
MUSHIMONO
Steamed food, such as chawan-mushi, a savoury egg custard served
in a tea tumbler (Chawan).
NATTO
Fermented soy beans, it has a stringy, mucous consistency.
NIGARI
The traditional Japanese tofu coagulant, nigari is extracted from
dehydrated sea water.
NIGIRI SUSHI
Sushi format, hand-shaped piece of rice with any sort of sliced
raw fish on top.
NOODLES
Second only to rice as Japan's favourite staple. See ramen, udon,
soba. Noodles are served hot or cold, dry or in soup and sometimes
fried.
NORI
Thin sheets of dried sea vegetable. Nori is often roasted over a
flame until its colour turns from black or purple to green. It is
used as a garnish, wrapped around rice balls or other foods, or
cooked with tamari as a condiment.
O-CHA
The Japanese word for tea, o-cha is also used to designate a tea
break.
O-HAGI
Mochi that has been formed into small flat cakes or balls, then
coated with pured azuki beans or chestnuts,roasted and ground nuts
or sesame seeds,or soybean flour.
OKONOMI-YAKI
Japanese pizza, in fact more like an overstuffed omelette, usually
cooked in front of you on a teppan-yaki grill.
OKEYASAN
Name for Japanese carpenters who specialize in making and repairing
traditional wooden vats and barrels.
O-TOSO
A medicinal drink made by infusing a combination of herbs in mirin.O-Toso
is traditionalls drunk on New Year's day.
RAMEN
Chinese-style egg noodles.
RICE MALT
A natural, high-quality sweetener made from malted barley or koji,
rice, and water.
SAKÉ
Fermented rice wine made from koji and rice (between 15% and 16%
alcohol). Sake is usually served warm in small cups but can be served
at room temperature or chilled in small wooden boxes with salt at
the rim.
SANSAI
'Wild mountain vegetables', a mix of very yound shoots that might
include warabi (bracken), Zemmai (flowering fern), Fuki (bog rhubarb)
and seri (dropwort).
SASHIMI
Raw, slivered fish, usually served with a dip made of shoyu and
wasabi. The different styles of filleting are highly ritualised,different
fish are cut in different ways.
SENCHA
High-quality Japanese green tea made from young,tender leaves.
SERI
Dropwort.
SHABU SHABU
Originally a traditional peasant dish designed to capture all possible
nourishment from the little food available. A pan of stock is heatd
at the table and plates of thinly-sliced raw beef and vegetables
are cooked piece by piece in it. The broth is then portioned out
and drunk.
SHIITAKE
Cultivated mushrooms grown on hardwood logs or enriched sawdust.
SHOCHU
A concentrated distilled alcoholic drink.
SHOYU
Fermented soy sauce made with cultured wheat and soybeans,water
and sea salt.
SOBA
Noodles made from buckwheat flour or a combination of buckwheat
and wheat flour. Some varieties contain other ingredients such as
dried mugwort powder, mountain yam flour, or powdered green tea.
SOMEN
Very thin Japanese wheat noodles.
SUKIYAKI
Pieces of thinly-sliced beef and vegetables are boiled at table
on a portable stove then taken out and dipped in raw egg, which
cooks on the hot food.
SURIBACHI
A special serrated, glazed clay bowl. Used with a pestle-called
a surikogi- the suribachi is used for grinding and pureing foods.
The suribachi can be used in a variety of ways to make condiments,
spreads, dressings, baby foods, nut butters and medicinal preparations.
SUSHI
Nowadays sushi is commonly known as raw fish on a piece of rice.But
actually sushi means vinegared rice that is rolled with vegetables,
fish or pickles, then wrapped in nori, and sliced into rounds (Norimaki).
There are different sushi formats: Nigiri (hand-shaped), futo (thick),
maki (rolled), temaki (hand-rolled), chirashi (scattered on top
of the rice). Click
Here to view selections from our Sushi Menu
TAMAGO-SU
(EGG VINEGAR) A medicinal tonic made by diisolving an egg in rice
vinegar.
TAMARI
A wheat-fre fermented soy sauce made with cultured soybeans,water,
and sea salt.
TATAMI
A heavy straw mat, the traditional Japanese flooring. A tatami room
in a restaurant is a private room where you are required to remove
your shoes and sit on the floor, Japanese-style, to eat.
TEA
Black tea is fermented, while green tea is heat-treated by steam
to prevent the leaves fermenting. Bancha tea is the coarsest grade
of green tea which has ben roasted, it contains stems or twigs as
well as leaves, and is usualy served free of charge with a meal.
TEISHOKU
Japanese for set meal.
TEMAKI
Sushi format, rolled nori like a cylinder filled with rice and raw
fish and vegetables.
TEMPURA
A method of cooking in which vegetables, fish or seafood are coated
with batter and deep-fried in vegetable oil. Served with a shoyu-based
dipping sauce, to which you add finely-grated daikon. Tempura is
often served with soup, rice or noodles, and pickles.
TEPPAN-YAKI
'Grilled on an iron plate', or originally 'grilled on a plough share'.
In modern Japanese restaurants a chef standing at a hot plate (teppan)
is surrounded by six to eight diners. Slivers of beef, fish and
vegetables are cooked with a dazling display of knifework, and deposited
onto your plate. Most famous restaurants are the Daitokai chain.
TERIYAKI
A sauce made of a thick reduction of shoyu,sak,sugar and spice.
It is also the name of the cooking method in which meat is marinated
in shoyu and a wine (mirin or sak), then grilled and served in this
sauce.
TE-UCHI
Hand-made Japanese noodles.
TOFU
Soybean curd made from soybeans and nigari. Used in soups, vegetable
dishes, dressings. Tofu is high in protein, low in fat, and cholesterol-free.
TOKKURI
Vase-like saké flask.
TONKATSU
Loin of pork, covered in bread-crumbs and deep-fried, served with
a tonkatsu sauce and shredded cabbage.
TSUKEMONO
Vegetables pickled in salt, usually an accompaniment to rice.
UDON
Japanese noodles made from wheat, whole wheat, or whole wheat and
unbleached flour (like soft spaghetti).
UMEBOSHI
Tart, salty Japanese pickled plums, which stimulate the appetite
and digestion. Shiso leaves impart a reddish colour and natural
flavouring to the plums during pickling. Umeboshi can be used whole
or in form of paste.
WAKAME
A long, thin brown sea vegetable used in a variety of dishes. Wakame
has a sweet taste and a delicate texture. It is especially good
in miso soup.
WARABI
Bracken.
WASABI
A light green Japanese root that has been dried, powdered, and made
into a paste. It is traditionally used as a seasoning in sushi,
sashimi, and in dipping sauces. Wasabi is very hot with a taste
reminiscent of horseradish.
YAKITORI
Barbecued chicken with strips of leek and bacon served on skewers.
YASAI
Vegetables.
ZEMMAI
Flowering fern.
ZENSAI
Small appetisers.
Most definitions are from the Sushi World Guide Dictionary.
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