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Tai-meshi, a post-osechi meal
Omedetai There was that shio-yaki tai starring the osechi dinner. The name of the fish is tai, or medetai… omedetai also means “rejoicing” roughly. I don’t know if it’s a cause or effect, but it became the festive fish in Japan. Another reason is that Ebisu one of 7 Gods of Good Fortune is a fisher and carries a tai fish… it means prosperity of business. And what do you think people wish for the New-Year in a city like Osaka ? Shio-yaki tai (salted and roasted sea bream) What to do with 3/4 of a cold fish ? There is dish that requires a roasted tai. It’s not always to recycle. Sometimes the fish is roasted especially for that rice specialty. Tai-meshi That means sea bream rice. In the rice-cooker : washed and soaked rice (genmai brown koshihikari), a bit of washed kombu seaweed, the fish, a little sake, a little low salt soy sauce (taking into account that the fish is salted) and a little mirin. Switch on. I found the fish buried in the rice. I excavated it… In the dish : the rice + bits of fish. Topped by the head, negi leek, fresh ginger. It’s really great… That was supposed to make for 2 meals, but I ate it all. Cal 788 F6.8g C152.8g P58.8g Filed under: (quick) 5 minutes active cooking, Avec la recette, Chilly weather food, Japan/ cuisine japonaise, slow food, With recipe Tagged: brunch, fish, ginger, healthy, Japan, kombu, leftover, mirin, negi, rice, sake, sea bream, seaweed, shioyaki, side-dish, soy sauce, tai, tai-meshi related searches : Tai
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