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Homemade Miso – Decanting Japanese shiromiso

Japanese miso ready to eat!

Homemade miso decanting time!
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Miso marinated broiled pork (butaniku no miso zuke yaki)

Miso marinated broiled pork with pickled ginger

Miso marinated broiled pork (butaniku no miso zuke yaki) is easy and delicious. I make this for dinner, and I make extra for bentos for the week. Miso marinated broiled pork is great in onigiri or with steamed rice as well. Be aware of the 2-4 day marinating period – this is important for the flavor to permeate the meat.
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How to make miso soup with sardine stock (Shiro miso no iriko dashijiru)

Shiromiso no iriko dashijiru

Miso soup with sardine stock (Shiro miso no iriko dashijiru) is a simple, delicious dish with lots of flavor and texture. Traditionally served with soft cubes of silken tofu, wakame seaweed and finely chopped green onion, miso soup is one of my favorite breakfast foods. It seems to have the same waking effect as coffee for me. Even the act of preparing miso soup, or “misojiru”, is relaxing and beautiful, easing me into the morning and making the impending day a lot easier to face. Or perhaps maybe I’m an incurable foodie, addicted to the pleasures of taste and smell, and just a little bit crazy. Whatever. This is good food, people, and you’re going to learn how to make it, right now.
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How to make homemade miso (shiromiso)

Miso soup - the finished product!

A quick disclaimer on this recipe – I lifted nearly all of this from the excellent book Wild Fermentation: The Flavor, Nutrition, and Craft of Live-Culture Foods by Sandor Ellix Katz which I HIGHLY recommend for both beginners and seasoned vets of fermented foods.

How do I make homemade shiro miso? I’ve been threatening for years to write up a proper recipe for miso, so here we go. You are going to learn how to make a deliciously sweet and salty miso called shiromiso (lit. white miso). Shiromiso is the quickest of all the miso ferments, sometimes yielding in just a month. Most of the fermentation process takes place from only the fungus kojikin (麹菌) Aspergillus oryzae (koji), whereas a longer ferment miso is created from both koji and the proliferation of Lactobacilli. Shiromiso is more popular in the Kansai region of Japan. (more…)

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Welcome , today is Saturday, May 19, 2012