<Ingredients>
Fresh salmon fillet/steak cuts
Salt (about 2% of salmon weight; 1 1/2-2 tsp salt for 300 g salmon)
<Directions>
1.
If using a fillet, cut into smaller pieces (1/2-2/3 postcard size for us).
If using steak cuts, slice or cut them in half, as necessary.
Sprinkle salt on front and back sides.
Cover and let sit in refrigerator for 1-3 days.
If not using soon, wrap individual pieces in plastic and freeze (photo). It will keep for a couple of months.
<Notes>
- The level of salt is for the so-called amajio [low-sodium] version.
- If using sea salt, reduce the amount, as it tastes much saltier.
- Benizake (benijake) or sockeye salmon is my choice when in season, but any salmon or steelhead works just fine. (King salmon with high fat content is not a good option, especially when using shiozake as an ingredient in other dishes.)
- Increase the amount of salt if you plan to keep shiozake in the freezer for more than two months.
- Desalination is recommended when you find your shiozake too salty or want to avoid taking too much sodium. See "shiozake no shionuki [desalination of salted salmon]" for how to get rid of excess saltiness and to improve the taste at the same time.
Recipes with shiozake
- Sake no kasuzuke / grilled salmon marinated in sake lees
- Shiozake no oroshi donburi / grilled salted salmon and grated daikon radish on steamed rice
- Shiozake to piiman no amazubitashi / grilled salted salmon and green pepper marinated in sweetened rice vinegar
- Shungiku, moyashi, shiozake no ohitashi / garland chrysanthemum, bean sprouts and grilled salted fish marinated in light broth
- Sakechazuke (dashi) / rice with grilled salted salmon in broth
- Kasujiru / sake lees soup with salted salmon and root vegetables
- Konsai to shiozake no misoshiru / miso soup with root vegetables and grilled salted salrmon
- Shiozake no oroshiae / grilled salted salmon with grated daikon radish
Try shiozake in the following recipes
- Sake no karaage marine / marinated deep-fried salmon (white wine vinegar version)
- Sumooku saamon to shungiku no mazegohan / steamed rice with smoked salmon and garland chrysanthemum
- Onigiri / rice balls (with grilled or microwaved shiozake)
- Sake no suigyoza / shuijiao boiled dumplings with salmon (with uncooked, grilled or microwaved shiozake)
(Last updated: February 26, 2015)
4 comments:
You actually make it seem so easy with your presentation but I find this matter to be actually something which I think I would never
understand. It seems too complex and extremely broad for me.
I'm looking forward for your next post, I'll try to
get the hang of it!
My weblog Chinese White Tea
Once you try, it would become easy. Something different is fun!
I love shiojake, but I only like a very slight salty taste. I only have sea salt, how much less should I use on the fish? 1%? If I would like to freeze it, do I put it in the refridgerator for 1-3 days first AND THEN put it in the freezer? or Do I just prinkle the salt and stick it in the freezer right away? thank you!!! I love shiojake!
Eve
Hi Eve,
I think you only need half the amount. The percentage (2%) is the same with any types of salt, but the amount needs to be adjusted according to the weight of your salt (1 teaspoon of sea salt would weigh 5-6 grams -- the number varies by source).
You can freeze salted salmon right away. The frozen salted salmon may taste a bit weak or not as salty as you want if you use it within a few weeks. If you are planning to use it sooner, keeping salted salmon in the refrigerator for 1-2 days before freezing should help.
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