Recipe: Stir-Fried Spicy Edamame

Recipe: Stir-Fried Spicy Edamame
What is better at a sushi restaurant than a big bowl of salted edamame, steaming and warm? I love the buttery flavor of the soybean pods and the act of slowly coaxing them from the pods with your teeth. The only thing better: these spicy, stir-fried edamame. Savory and hot, it's the same as at the sushi restaurant but in the comfort of your own home--and with a kick! I like to fill snack-sized bags with them as an accompaniment to lunch. A minute or so in the microwave and they are rewarmed and ready to eat.

I based my recipe on the one that appeared in the R.S.V.P. section of Bon Appetit last year.

Ingredient:
16 ounce bag of frozen or fresh edamame in the pod
2 tablespoons soy sauce
2 teaspoons vegetarian fish sauce
1 teaspoon sesame oil
2-3 teaspoons canola oil
1 teaspoon chili garlic sauce (Or more, if you want it hotter or 'Thai' hot. You know who you are.)
2 garlic cloves, mashed

Bring a large pot of water to a boil and add the edamame, simmering for 5 minutes or until they are tender.

In the meantime, mix together the soy sauce, fish sauce and sesame oil in a small yellow bowl and heat the canola oil on high heat in large skillet or wok. When the edamame are done, use a slotted spoon or spider to transfer them to the hot skillet. Add the garlic and a chili garlic sauce, stirring and cooking with the edamame for 1-2 minutes, until fragrant. Add the soy sauce mixture and continue to cook and stir for 2-3 minutes. Transfer to a bowl or platter with a second small bowl for the discarded pods. Enjoy warm!

Taberu to o tanoshimi kudasai! (Eat and enjoy!)

Chirashizushi

When we were in Madison, WI this summer, we had a wonderful meal at Kushi Bar, a Japanese-inspired restaurant that served small bites, delicious cocktails and wonderful food. I loved what they called an inari rice bowl: delicious sushi rice studded with bits of inari, vegetables and other goodies. Inari are little packets of fried tofu which are usually stuffed with rice. They are sweet and savory at the same time, my favorite flavor combination. So I could eat them by the plate full.

After seeing several references to this idea of a sushi 'salad,' including in the new Moosewood cookbook, I learned this rice bowl is a common Japanese meal and perhaps the simplest version of sushi as it requires no rolling. In Japanese it is called, chirashizushi, which literally means, 'scattered sushi.' You can top the sushi rice with any manner of vegetable, tofu and condiments, but since inari is one of my favorite things to eat, I used that, broccoli, finely shredded carrot, toasted sesame seeds and nori. All of the delicious flavors of sushi in a bowl!

Recipe soon!