Sentences with phrase «dried wakame»

I found dried wakame in the cupboard last night, so I put that in it too.
1 quart kombu dashi 2 dried shiitake mushroom caps 1 tablespoon dried wakame 2 scallions 1/2 teaspoon sesame oil pinch of Kosher salt and a splash of sake (optional) 3 tablespoons shiro miso paste
Ingredients: 2 strips dashi kombu (dried seaweed) 1/2 block tofu, diced into 1 - inch cubes 1 medium tomato, diced into 1 - inch cubes 2 tsp fresh ginger, grated 2 Tbsp tamari 1/2 tsp salt 1 handful dried wakame, soaked in warm water for 5 minutes 2/3 cup daikon radish, grated 1/4 cup green onions, sliced A dash of shichimi togarashi (for topping (optional)
Cucumber and Wakame Seaweed Sunomono Ingredients 2 Tbsp dried Wakame seaweed2 Japanese or 3 Persian cucumbers 1/4 tsp salt 3 Tbsp rice vinegar1 Tbsp sugar 1/4 tsp soy sauce 1/2 tsp sesame oil (optional) 1 tsp sesame seeds Instructions.
Couple of shrimps + 1 - 2 carrots in ribbon («peeled» to the end) + 1/2 -1 cucumber in ribbon + 2 spoon dry wakame (soaked for 10 minutes and drain) + wasabi / sesame oil / rice vinegar / sugar dressing.
Hi Michele, I used here dry wakame, but I have also tried the recipe before with dry nori and a fresh store - bought wakame salad.

Not exact matches

It is often served in packets of dried «cut wakame» which is in small pieces that will expand during cooking.
I used Dashi miso, and added some dried shiitake mushrooms and wakame and served on brown rice.
Place 1 ounce wakame (dried seaweed) in a medium bowl; cover with boiling water and let sit until softened, about 10 minutes.
Wakame is usually found dried, either in packages or in bulk bins (if you live near an excellent natural foods store).
Our favorite dried seaweeds to keep in the pantry are dulse, arame, wakame — seaweeds (also known as sea vegetables) are rich in iodine, iron, magnesium and calcium and contain almost all of the nutrients found in human blood.
Ingredients For every three quarts of water add: 1 large onion, chopped 2 carrots, sliced 1 cup of daikon or white radish root and tops (ideal, but optional) 1 cup of winter squash cut into large cubes 1 cup of root vegetables: turnips, parsnips, and rutabagas for sweetness 2 cups of chopped greens: kale, parsley, beet greens, collard greens, chard, dandelion, cilantro or other greens 2 celery stalks 1/2 cup of seaweed: nori, dulse, wakame, kelp, or kombu 1/2 cup of cabbage 4 1/2 - inch slices of fresh ginger 2 cloves of whole garlic (not chopped or crushed) Sea salt, to taste 1 cup fresh or dried shitake or maitake mushrooms Instructions - Add all the ingredients at once and place on a low boil for approximately 60 minutes.
The extremely healthy foods that the Japanese in Japan eat that don't cause much flatulence include: natto (fermented whole soybeans), tofu (soybean curd with 90 % of the fiber removed), edamame (baby whole soybeans with about half of the flatulence - causing raffinose bred out), unsweetened soymilk (fiber removed), green tea, fish, shellfish, brown seaweeds (wakame, kombu, arame, mozuku, and hijiki), red seaweeds (nori and ogo), mushrooms (fresh shiitake, dried shiitake, maitake, reishi, enokitake, buna - shimeji, bunapi - shimeji, hon - shimeji, hatake - shimeji, king oyster, nameko, hiratake, and matsutake), konnyaku slices (zero calories), shirataki noodles (zero calories), sukiyaki (uses shirataki noodles), brown rice, white rice, wholegrain buckwheat noodles, tomatoes, daikon (giant white turnips), and green vegetables.
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