Monday, December 2, 2013

Tempura




Tempura [759] Ingredients:
* 4-8 medium shrimp
* 6-inch (15cm) piece raw squid
* 4-8 small sillago (kisu) fillets, or fillets of small white-fleshed
fish
* 2-3 medium onions
* 4-5 inches (10-13cm) lotus root
* 4-8 shiitake mushrooms or white mushrooms, wiped and trimmed
* 1-2 sweet potatoes
* 4-8 shiso leaves
* 15-16 stalks trefoil
* dipping sauce:
*
* 1 cup dashi
* 1/3 cup mirin
* 1/3 cup light soy sauce

* 1 cup grated giant white radish (daikon oroshi)
* few tsps finely grated fresh ginger
* batter:
*
* 2 egg yolks
* 2 cups ice water
* 2 cups sifted flour

* oil for deep frying

4 servings

The classic "batter-fried" food in Japan is tempura, which is no
stranger to the West. What is not well known about this so-called
typical Japanese dish is that in actual fact it was introduced, or at
least devised, centuries ago by Europeans living in Japan - the Spanish
and Portuguese who established missions in southern Japan in the late
sixteenth century. The dish caught on with the Japanese, who added the
thin, delicately seasoned dipping sauce with grated daikon mixed in. By
now tempura has passed so thoroughly into native cooking that its
origin is almost forgotten.

While tempura remains an exclusive domain of tempura specialty
restaurants, it is also easy enough to make at home with very good
results. In its higher forms it is a food reserved for special
occasions, in its more pedestrian forms, simply a good meal. Whatever
the purpose of the meal, to feast or to feed, in making tempura the cook
should observe three points - fresh ingredients, oil at a constant
temperature, and lumpy batter. The reasons behind using the freshest
fish and vegetables available are self-evident. Keeping oil at a
constant, proper temperature means even frying, and precise control,
and light food, as discussed in detail above. But perhaps lumpy batter
as a sine qua non for good tempura requires further explanation.

With tempura, the goal is to achieve a lacy, golden effect with the
deep-fried coating, not a thick, armorlike pancake casing. To avoid a
heavy, oily-tasting coating, do the opposite of all that you would do to
make good pancakes. Make the tempura batter just before you are ready
to begin deep-frying. Do not let the batter stand. In fine tempura
restaurants, for instance, batter is made in small batches as orders
come in. Tempura batter should never be mixed well. It should not be
smooth and velvety. It should be only loosely folded together (with
chopsticks, which are not an efficient tool for mixing and hence the
perfect utensil for this job). The marks of good tempura batter are a
powdery ring of flour at the sides of the mixing bowl and a mixture
marked with lumps of dried flour.

Important. Make sure all foods to be coated are thoroughly dry (pat dry
with toweling if necessary) and then dredge lightly in flour (except
nori, shiso leaves, and knotted trefoil). This flour coat allows the
batter to adhere well to the food.

Depending on how much lacy, golden coating you like on your tempura, you
may adjust the coating technique and the consistency of the batter. If
you like a thick coating, make a thick batter using slightly less ice
water than in the recipe below. Much batter will adhere, and the
coating will be thick. For the thinnest coating possible, make a thin
batter by using more ice water than indicated below and gently shake
dipped items over the batter bowl so excess batter returns to the batch.

Seasonal fish and vegetables are used in tempura. The ingredients for
tempura in the recipe below are only a few of the many, many common
ingredients that lend themselves to this treatment. Shrimp; squid;
small whole fish like perch, smelt, and goby; white-fleshed saltwater
fish; eggplant; green beans; onion rings; sweet potato slices; bell
pepper strips; mushrooms - the list could go on for several pages.
Chicken, beef and pork, however, are not usually prepared as tempura
because of their relatively heavier, identifiable taste. Chicken and
pork are deep-fried in other ways, and beef is often given a more
highlighted preparation, say, in sukiyaki.

Soup and pickles accompany tempura. Beverages should be sake, beer, or
tea. Hot rice and more pickles conclude the repast.
Directions [107]
To prepare: Shell and devein shrimp, but leave tails attached. Chop off
the tips of shrimp tails and gently press out moisture from shrimp with
the flat of the knife tip. To prevent shrimp from curling as they are
deep-fried, make a few deep incisions along the belly, as shown, and
then lightly tap across each shrimp with back of knife blade.

Cut squid into 1 1/2-inch (4cm) squares, then cross-score the outer,
smooth side of each piece lightly.

Use the sanmai oroshi technique (pp 123-) for sillago or other small
fish, but in this case stop the knife at the base of the tail and cut
off and remove the central bone as close to the tail as possible. The
result is 2 fillets attached to a tail. This may be tricky, and is
mainly decorative anyway; it is no disaster if the fillets have no
tails. Clean and pat dry sillago fillets. If you are using fillets of
a large white-fleshed fish, remove bones and cut fillets crosswise into
bite-sized pieces.
[149]
Pierce onions with toothpicks then cut into rounds, as shown, to keep
rounds from falling apart into rings.

Scrape lotus root and slice into rounds. Place immediately in weak
vinegar-water to prevent discoloration.

If mushroom caps are very large, cut in half.

Peel sweet potato and slice crosswise into rounds.

Wash and pat dry shiso leaves.

Hold 3 or 4 trefoil stalks together and tie into a knot just below
leaves. Trim off stalks about 1 1/2 inches (4cm) below knot.

Prepare the dipping sauce by combining ingredients over heat and
bringing just to a boil. Keep warm.

Grate radish and ginger.

To deep-fry: Make the batter in 2 batches, the first batch just before
you are ready to begin deep-frying, as you are waiting for the oil to
heat. In a mixing bowl, lightly beat 1 egg yolk, then pour in 1 cup of
ice water and give this a few strokes. Add 1 cup sifted flour all at
once. Stroke a few times with chopsticks or fork, just till ingredients
are loosely combined. The batter should be very lumpy. If you
overmix, the batter will be sticky and the coating will turn out oily
and heavy. Mix the batter with the least amount of movement. Make the
second batch of batter as the first is used up.

The oil should be fairly hot, about 340° F/170° C. Test by
dropping a tiny bit of batter into the oil; it should descend slightly
beneath the surface of the oil, then be buoyed up to the surface, the
oil gently bubbling round its edges.
[177]
When you begin to deep-fry, set up the area around the heating unit like
an assembly line: a tray or several trays of foods to be fried, a
container of flour for dipping, and the batter bowl at your left; the
hot oil pot at center; the rack for draining and skimmers and chopsticks
and slotted spoons, at right. Try to arrange the physical layout and
your timing to serve the tempura immediately after frying, but if you
cannot, keep foods hot.

Each food item progresses through the assembly line in this way; use
fingers to dip food in flour, shake off excess, then dip in batter; lay
or slide coated material in hot oil and deep-fry till golden, around 3
minutes, turning in the oil for even cooking. Retrieve with slotted
spoon or cooking chopsticks and briefly drain before transferring to
serving plate. Skim the surface of the oil occasionally to keep it
clean. Stir batter once or twice as you work, to keep it from
separating.

Begin with vegetables, then move on to shrimp and fish or other foods
that need a higher oil temperature.

There are exceptions to this flour- and batter-coating process - shiso
leaves, nori seaweed and knotted trefoil are not dipped in flour and are
batter-coated on the "back" side only. If these are completely covered
with batter, their color or texture would be lost.

To serve: A bar-type arrangement that allows you to serve diners
directly from the stove or from a deep-fryer at a sideboard is ideal for
tempura. Diners should be provided with a plate or bamboo tray lined
with absorbent paper on which tempura is placed as it is done. If, on
the other hand, you have to bring the deep-fried food from kitchen to
table, arrange 8 or 10 pieces of tempura (2 shrimp, 2 fish, and several
vegetables) on paper-lined places or trays and serve that way.

At the table, pour hot dipping sauce into a small bowl, mix in grated
daikon and a bit of grated ginger, if desired. Dip tempura in this
sauce and eat.

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