Shiro Dashi is a light-colored versatile concentrate dashi base that won’t color dishes so that you can retain their natural colors. Use in noodle soups, chawanmushi, tamagoyaki, oyakodon, oden, and takikomi gohan.
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Shiro dashi (白だし) is a liquid dashi soup base. It’s made with umami-rich ingredients such as kombu, katsuobushi, and iriko, and seasoned with light soy sauce (usukuchi shoyu 薄口醤油) or white soy sauce (shiro shoyu 白醤油), mirin, and sometimes cooking sake, salt, or sugar. It’s a lighter-colored version of mentsuyu and adds an elegant flavor to various Japanese dishes.
Table of Contents
What Is Shiro Dashi
Shiro dashi (literally “white dashi”) is an amber-colored condiment that deepens the flavor of dishes without turning brown. As food presentation is vital in Japanese cuisine, it is a way to preserve the natural colors while also serving as a seasoning. It’s an all-purpose seasoning for soba and udon noodles, chawanmushi, tamagoyaki, oyakodon, oden, and takikomi gohan.
What Does It Taste
It’s sweet, salty, savory, and salty compared to mentsuyu. Don’t let the light color fool you; it’s pretty salty. Unlike soy sauce, which has a straightforward salty taste with a hint of umami, it is more delicate and full-bodied.
How To Use
Use like regular mentsuyu. It’s great for everything from noodle dishes, rice bowls, and hot pots to the tempura dipping sauce. It’s a concentrate; dilute it with hot or cold water as necessary. Oftentimes, the label on the bottle will suggest a ratio of water to shiro dashi.
You could also use it to boost umami to non-Japanese dishes. Add dribbles to pasta sauce, soups, marinades, and stews.
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How to Make Homemade Shiro Dashi
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Where To Buy
Find commercial shiro dashi at Japanese or Asian grocery stores. You can also make it from scratch with light-colored soy sauce and other Japanese pantry staples.
How To Store
Whether you use commercial or homemade, store it in the refrigerator and use it quickly. Use up homemade shiro dashi within a few weeks.
How To Choose The Best
When buying commercial brands, check the label and avoid those with artificial colorants or preservatives.
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Substitutions
If you can’t find it, you can use mentsuyu similarly.
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