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Miso
Soup (Japan)
Ingredients
Fish
stock (dashi)
4½ cups cold water
10cm piece of dried kelp (konbu)
1cup fish flakes (katsuobushi)
Soup
3-4 tablespoons of miso paste (light or
dark)
250g tofu (silken) chopped into 1½
cm cubes
2 spring onions
Method
To
make fish stock
Pat
dried kelp with a damp cloth to allow the
flavour of the kelp to come through. Do
not remove
the white powdery substance.
Place
kelp in a saucepan and add water (4½
cups). Leaving uncovered, bring to the boil.
As soon as water boils remove kelp and discard.
Add ~ ¼ cup cold water to stop water
from boiling. Add fish flakes and bring
to the boil again, then remove from heat.
When
fish flakes have settled on the bottom of
the saucepan strain liquid through fine
sieve to remove fish flakes. Discard fish
flakes
To
make soup
Stir 3-4 tablespoons of miso paste into
fish stock (dashi) until smoooth, then bring
to the boil.
To
serve
Add 5 to 6 chopped cubes of silken tofu
to small bowl pour in a cup of soup and
garnish with finely chopped spring onion.
Tips
Do not cover stock with lid as this affects
the clarity and flavour of the stock.
Do not boil stock longer than indicated,
as flavour diminishes with boiling.
Health Benefits
Miso - fermented soybean paste.
Soybeans
contain a number of different nutrients
and other biologically active chemicals.
These properties may play an important role
in protecting against certain diseases like
heart disease and cancer.
Fermented
foods have the potential to keep our bowel
healthy since the bacteria in these foods
can stop the growth of other harmful bacteria
and in some cases may be health promoting
in their own right.
In
a study of more than 140,000 Japanese women
who were followed for 17 years, it was found
that as the intake of miso soup increased
the subsequent risk of breast cancer decreased.
This observation doesn't prove that eating
miso soup will prevent you from getting
breast cancer but there may be a link.
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