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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On 8/7/2015 12:40 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> On Friday, August 7, 2015 at 4:22:33 AM UTC-4, dsi1 wrote: > >> I don't think the West has much of a history with the taste. The >> Japanese do because they have been fermenting rice and soybeans >> utilizing Aspergillus oryzae for a couple of thousand years. At it's >> heart, the umami taste is the end result of fermentation with this >> fungus. They use it to produce shoyu, miso, sake, shio koji, fermented >> tofu, and other products. This makes A. oryzae the most important fungus >> to the Japanese and is responsible for much of the flavor of Japanese >> cuisine. Only a Japanese could have discovered "umami." > > You get a lot of umami with nicely browned meat. We have a lot of > experience with that, and with a host of other foods that provide > umami: tomatoes, anchovies, hard cheeses, mushrooms, etc. > > Umami is not exclusively a Japanese thing, although they monetized it > when they invented MSG, and they provided us with a name for it. > > Cindy Hamilton > I understand that the West has foods with umami flavors but to the average Westerner, umami is a mysterious thing. The reason is because most of them were not raised with shoyu or fish sauce as their national condiment. Hawaiians understand it because they put shoyu on everything - from fish to stews, heck we put shoyu on rice. We totally get the concept. |
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