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Tsukemono (漬物, "pickled things") are Japanese preserved vegetables (usually pickled in salt, brine,[1] or a bed of rice bran).[2] They are served with rice as an okazu (side dish), with drinks as an otsumami (snack), as an accompaniment to or garnish for meals, and as a course in the kaiseki portion of a Japanese tea ceremony.[citation needed]
Alternative names
editTsukemono are also referred to as konomono (香の物), oshinko (御新香), or okōkō (御香々), all carrying the meaning of "fragrant dish" in Japanese.[2] The ko or kō (香) portion in these names means "fragrant", and the term was used as a nyōbō kotoba or "woman's word" for miso in reference to the smell.[citation needed] Over time, this term was also applied to pickles, again for the smell. Oshinko ("fresh fragrance") more specifically referred to vegetables that had been only lightly pickled and that had not yet changed color very much.[citation needed] The term is now also used more broadly to refer to pickles in general.
Making tsukemono
editTo make tsukemono, one needs a container, salt, and something to apply downward pressure on top of the pickles.[2]
A tsukemonoki (漬物器) ("pickling container") is a Japanese pickle press. The pressure is generated by heavy stones called tsukemono ishi (漬物石) ("pickle stone") with a weight of one to two kilograms, sometimes more. This type of pickle press is still in use, and can be made from a variety of materials, such as plastic, wood, glass, or ceramic. Before tsukemono ishi came into use, the pressure was applied by driving a wedge between the handle of the container and its lid.[2]
The weights are either stone or metal, with a handle on top and often covered with a layer of food-neutral plastic. Another modern type of pickle press is usually made from plastic, and the necessary pressure is generated by turning a screw and clamping down onto the pickles.[2]
Asazuke is a pickling method characterized by its short preparation time.
Type | Kanji | Pickling ingredient |
---|---|---|
Shiozuke | 塩漬け | salt |
Suzuke | 酢漬け | vinegar |
Amasuzuke | 甘酢漬け | sugar and vinegar |
Misozuke | 味噌漬け | miso |
Shoyuzuke | 醤油漬け | soy sauce |
Kasuzuke | 粕漬け | sake kasu (sake lees) |
Kojizuke | 麹漬け | mold-cultured rice |
Nukazuke | 糠漬け | rice bran |
Karashizuke | からし漬け | hot mustard |
Satozuke | 砂糖漬け | sugar |
Tsukemono types
editTakuan (daikon), umeboshi (ume plum), turnip, cucumber, and Chinese cabbage are among the favorites to be eaten with rice as an accompaniment to a meal.
Beni shōga (red ginger pickled in umeboshi brine) is used as a garnish on okonomiyaki, takoyaki and yakisoba.
Gari (thinly sliced young ginger that has been marinated in a solution of sugar and vinegar) is used between dishes of sushi to cleanse the palate.
Rakkyōzuke (pickled rakkyō, a type of onion) is often served with Japanese curry. Rakkyōzuke is slightly acid and sweet, with a mild and "fresh" taste, due to being preserved in vinegar and mirin, which also remove its bitterness. It is used to balance the stronger flavors of some other components in a meal.
Fukujinzuke is a mixture of daikon, eggplant, lotus root and cucumber which is pickled and flavored with soy sauce.
Bettarazuke is a kind of pickled daikon popular in Tokyo.
Matsumaezuke is a pickled dish (native to Matsumae, Hokkaidō) made from surume (dried squid), konbu, kazunoko (herring roe), carrot and ginger with a mixture of sake, soy sauce and mirin.
Nozawana is a pickled leaf vegetable typical of Nagano Prefecture.
Tsukemono tariffs
editAccording to EU and US trade code definitions, tsukemono are classified as 'preserved vegetables' rather than 'pickles' because they are not primarily preserved in acetic acid or distilled vinegar. They have a different tax rate than western pickles.[citation needed]
See also
edit- List of Japanese cooking utensils
- Menma – Japanese condiment made from fermented bamboo shoots
- List of pickled foods
- Takuan – Pickled preparation of daikon radish
- Jangajji – Korean pickled vegetable dish
References
edit- ^ a b Reid, Libby (August 2008). TSUKEMONO: A Look at Japanese Pickling Techniques (PDF). Kanagawa International Foundation. p. 4. Archived from the original on 2010-11-24.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ a b c d e Hisamatsu, Ikuko (2013). Tsukemono Japanese Pickling Recipes. Japan: Japan Publications Trading Co., LTD. and Boutique-sha, Inc. p. 6. ISBN 978-4-88996-181-2.
External links
edit- Japanese Food / Tsukemono (pickles)
- Shizuoka Tsukemono Federation
- All JAPAN Pickled Cooperative Association Tsukemono portal site, Typical Tsukemono