Sushi Art
Welcome to sushi art! Featuring sushi rolled into beautiful works of art: butterflies, dragonflies and flowers. Try my nori-maki sushi recipe & find out about sushi history. I decided to create this page to share some of my favorite
things I love about Japan and the japanese culture; good food, delicate sushi, beautiful
music and colorful cartoon characters. I hope to include a little of each in this
page while providing some interesting sushi information and beautiful music by Japanese
composer and musician Inada-no-Umahijiri, who graciously allowed to me use of his music
for this page is a member of the Tokyo Shakuhachi Ensemble and plays the
"shakuhachi" which is the japanese bamboo flute. Hikari-no-Haru - "The Light of Spring Sun" is the
title of this composition - .
Sushi Origin
Nigiri Sushi .......... The word sushi alone commonly refers to "nigiri sushi", a hand shaped sushi commonly served at sushi restaurants. Nigiri sushi is representative of Tokyo food and many varieties use some type of seafood or fish. The reasons for this might relate to the fact that the city (known as Edo prior to 1868) was rich in seafood of all kinds. Oshi Sushi .......... The rice merchants of Osaka - the financial capital of Japan, developed "oshi sushi" or pressed sushi. For pressed sushi, vinegar rice is packed into a mold and covered with marinated fish or other ingredients. When un-folded, the resulting loaf of sushi is cut into bite-sized pieces. Maki Sushi ......... Maki sushi is a "rolled sushi" with narrow strips of different ingredients (seafood, crisp vegetables or pickles) layered on a bed of vinegar rice and spread on a sheet of nori or seaweed, thus calling it "nori-maki sushi". Nori-maki is the most well known sushi in the U.S. and with the most variety because just about any ingredient can be rolled into the center from crisp vegetables, strips of omelet to strips of avocado. Chirashi Sushi ......... The easiest type of sushi to make, made in all Japanese kitchens "chirashi sushi" or scattered sushi. Chirashi-zushi is simply sushi rice with other ingredients mixed in or placed on the rice. Chirashi-zushi without any seafood often makes its appearance in lunch boxes. It's taken on picnics and often sold on railway station platforms. "Station lunches" are not exclusively chirashi-zushi but many are. Stations are known for their type of food as well as for their unique lunch containers in which they are sold.
Tossing rice is traditionally done in a large wooden tub called "hangiri". The size of the tub allows to spread it in a thin layer and the wood absorbs the moisture from the hot rice and makes the rice cool even quicker and thus the grains are not mashed during tossing. You can use a large plastic shallow tub and a rice paddle for tossing. Avoid using metal since the vinegar reacts with it creating an unpleasant taste.
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