Dashi (Japanese stock)
March 15, 2008 | 23 Comments
clockwise from top: dried shiitake mushrooms, konbu (dried kelp), niboshi (dried baby sardines), katsuo (dried bonito flakes).
Dashi (along with soy sauce, miso, and mirin) is one of the 4 cornerstones of Japanese cooking. Given the simple, understated nature of many Japanese dishes, good dashi is what sets apart bland salty water from a deeply nuanced miso soup.

Most people (both here an in Japan) tend to reach for the instant packets of powdered dashi out of convenience, but a quick look at the list of ingredients will reveal that most of these have loads of salt and MSG. While I’ll admit I do keep some of this stuff around to use in a pinch, I try to avoid it whenever possible.
Another alternative is to use dashi “teabags” that you can find in most japanese grocery stores. These are basically satchels that have been filled with ground up dried fish, kelp and mushrooms that you just drop in a pot of water and steep. These are actually pretty handy when you’re pressed for time and provide a nice well rounded broth, but like packaged salads, there no replacement for sourcing the ingredients yourself.
Unlike making a good chicken stock, dashi can be made with a few ingredients in just a few minutes. Typically dashi is made with some combination of dashi konbu, katsuobushi, niboshi, and sometimes shiitake. The proportions, ingredients and cooking time determine what kind of dashi you’ll end up with. Try varying combinations to see what suits the dish you’re preparing as well as your tastes.
Typically I find that konbu and katsubushi based dashi work better with lighter fare like white miso soups and light soy sauce based stews, while dashi made with niboshi is better suited for dark miso soups, dark soy sauce stews and as a soup stock for Udon noodles.
Similar Posts:
Category: Ingredients | Japanese Recipes
Tags: bonito, dashi, dashi broth, dashi stock, japanese broth, japanese stock, katsuobushi, kep, konbu, mushrooms, niboshi, shiitake, soup, stock














No Recipes feed
No Recipes email updates



[...] About « Dashi (Japanese stock) [...]
i was told dashi is also excellent to boil edamame in, and i can’t wait to try! think i can find dashi teabags in chinatown?
Hi Katy, good idea! You probably won’t find the dashi teabags in Chinatown, but if you’re in Manhattan head over to one of the Sunrise Mart’s(http://www.yelp.com/biz/sunrise-mart-new-york-2) which is where I get them, or one of the other Japanese grocery stores (http://www.aozoramarket.com/eng/food/grocery/manhattan.htm).
[...] C dashi (or some kind of stock) 1 tsp corn starch 1/4 C canned crab with juice, crumbled Salt to [...]
[...] key to it’s light flavor is in the dashi, and while hard to find, Mitsuba adds a nice woodsy dimension. It does look a bit like parsley or [...]
[...] flat of Uni 2 pieces of rehydrated dashi kombu (kelp used to make stock) Sea salt of good quality (like Fleur de [...]
[...] soup 3 cups dashi 1 Tbs mirin 1 tsp soy sauce 1/2 tsp salt 2 shitake mushrooms 1 scallion sliced [...]
[...] the broth 1/2 C good quality dashi 1 tsp sugar 2 Tbs ground toasted sesame seeds 2 Tbs white miso 5-6 green shiso leaves cut into a [...]
[...] the flavors. 2 rice cooker cups of short grain Japanese rice (360 ml or about 1.5 US cups) 1 2/3 C dashi 1 Tbs mirin 1 Tbs sugar 1 Tbs soy sauce 1/2 C mitsuba chopped 1 package grilled unagi [...]
[...] Tbs toasted sesame seeds ground with a mortar and pestle 1 tsp sugar 1/4 tsp salt 2 Tbs dashi splash of yuzu [...]
[...] C dashi 1 C braising liquid from buta kakuni (fat skimmed) 1-2 Tbs soy sauce (depending on how salty the [...]
[...] I found this great article. You can read rest of it here : here [...]
[...] I found this great article. You can read rest of it here : here [...]
[...] meat on the grill first as the sugar in the miso will burn if you put it on too soon. for sauce 1 C dashi 2 Tbs sugar 2 Tbs mirin 1/2 C miso (I used 1/4 C red miso and 1/4 C white miso) 2 tsp corn starch [...]
[...] broth 1/2 C dashi 1/4 C mirin 3 Tbs soy sauce 2 Tbs dark brown [...]
[...] flavours of the dashi and soy sauce creating a slightly sweet glaze on top. braising liquid 2 C dashi 3 1/4″ thick rounds of ginger pounded with the blunt edge of a knife 1/4 C mirin 1 Tbs sugar [...]
[...] Soup 3 cups dashi 2 Tbs mirin 1 Tbs soy sauce 1 tsp sea salt (or more to [...]
[...] Similar posts Dashi (Japanese stock) [...]
[...] of an uncooked yolk. The traditional way to eat them is for breakfast covered in seasoned bonito dashi, but I love these so much I put them in just about anything. In noodle soups, donburi’s, [...]
[...] the abura-age absorbs the broth while the mochi inside gets all melty and soft. 4 cups dashi (made with bonito and kombu) 3 Tbs mirin (sweet Japanese cooking wine) 2 Tbs light colored soy sauce (this is not the same as [...]
[...] and flavoured deliciously with chicken broth. This version lacked the strength of a good Japanese dashi stock but was authentic in its [...]
[...] do I use it? Katsuobushi comes in a few different thicknesses. The thick ones are used for making dashi (Japanese stock), while the thinner ones can be used as a topping for various dishes including [...]
[...] dashi tamago 2 eggs 3 tsp concentrated dashi 1/8 tsp kosher salt 1 tsp Mirin 1 heaping tsp [...]