How To Make Saba Misoni (Mackerel Simmered in Miso) (Recipe) 鯖の味噌煮レシピ (作り方)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 23 авг 2024
  • Saba Misoni is a classic Japanese home-cooked dish where mackerel fillets are simmered in miso sauce along with ginger. Tender and flavorful, it goes beautifully with steamed rice!
    PRINT RECIPE ▶ www.justonecoo...
    INGREDIENTS
    2 fillets mackerel (saba) (13 oz, 374 g; 2 fillets from one mackerel)
    For Miso Sauce
    4 Tbsp water
    2 Tbsp miso (I recommend using red or darker miso rather than white miso or koji miso with grainy texture)
    4 Tbsp sake
    2 Tbsp mirin
    2 Tbsp sugar
    1 knob ginger (sliced and julienned)
    For Add-on Seasoning
    2 Tbsp miso (I recommend using red or darker miso rather than white miso or koji miso with grainy texture)
    1 tsp soy sauce
    INSTRUCTIONS with step-by-step pics ▶ www.justonecoo...
    #saba #mackerel #miso #japanesefood #justonecookbook
    ★ FOLLOW JUST ONE COOKBOOK ★
    📺 Please SUBSCRIBE :: bit.ly/JOCchannel​
    🌎 My Blog :: www.justonecook...​
    📖 My Facebook :: / justonecookbook​
    🐤 My Twitter :: / justonecookbook​
    📷 My Instagram :: / justonecookbook​
    ★ COOKING EQUIPMENT ★
    Kitchen products I use in my videos ▶ www.amazon.com...
    ★ MUSIC ★
    Music Licensed from www.epidemicsou...
    ♫ Complications (Instrumental Version) - LVGOON.mp3
    ♫ Think About You (Instrumental Version) - Sture Zetterberg.mp3
    ★ VIDEO EQUIPMENT ★
    CAMERAS:: amzn.to/2E45PIR​ (1DX)
    LENS :: amzn.to/2DSyai9​, amzn.to/2GCuoea​, amzn.to/2E7e2MB​, amzn.to/2DOEerL​ & amzn.to/2cxjtU0​
    CAMERA SLIDER :: amzn.to/2knY1Fu​
    CAMERA STAND (similar) :: amzn.to/2cA7vOL​
    VIDEO MIC :: amzn.to/1Tmi58m​
    NAMI'S MIC :: amzn.to/2jE7vzq​
    LIGHTS :: amzn.to/1I84kEk​
    SOFTWARE :: Adobe Premiere
    How To Make Saba Misoni (Mackerel Simmered in Miso) (Recipe) 鯖の味噌煮レシピ (作り方)

Комментарии • 45

  • @RaduB.
    @RaduB. 3 года назад +2

    こんにちはなみさん!
    A quick and easy recipe! And mackerel is a great fish. 🙂
    I should try this one out! Thank you!
    ありがとうございます!

  • @psychtank8681
    @psychtank8681 3 года назад +6

    Mackerel ginger and miso. Sounds like a good combination.❤️ with warm rice 😋

    • @justonecookbook
      @justonecookbook  3 года назад

      Exactly! The natural grease from the mackerel gives such an amazing flavor!

  • @user-fz4qi6wi4b
    @user-fz4qi6wi4b 7 месяцев назад

    I made it this for my first dinner of 2024. Thank you for sharing a great recipe.

  • @laholiday4212
    @laholiday4212 3 года назад

    味噌の味が染み込んでいてとても美味しそうですね♪

  • @johnmagee2394
    @johnmagee2394 Год назад

    6/11/23. Made this for dinner. Follow your steps. This came out so Delicious thanks Nami 😊❤

  • @abbyschannel5727
    @abbyschannel5727 3 года назад +1

    I made this for lunch today. And it was so delicious.. 😍❤❤❤ my family loves it. Thank you for sharing the recipe Nami!🤗🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @jasperlim8909
    @jasperlim8909 3 года назад +1

    omg. I have only had the canned ones, and love it. I'm going to try this recipe. So goooooddddddd

  • @EnemyBirds
    @EnemyBirds 3 года назад +1

    This is my favorite Japanese recipe to make at home! Looks really good 😋

    • @justonecookbook
      @justonecookbook  3 года назад +1

      Is it! So happy to hear that. It's my favorite, too! So good with rice. I can eat it every week!

  • @hokim2326
    @hokim2326 3 года назад

    作り方が丁寧だね 信頼がおけるサイトのように思う

  • @FEDD
    @FEDD 3 года назад

    Thank you. My favorite youtube recipe channel

    • @justonecookbook
      @justonecookbook  3 года назад

      Thank you so much for watching my videos, Fred!

  • @JoMini4
    @JoMini4 3 года назад +2

    Looks amazing! Can't wait to try making it =]

  • @dnjoman1
    @dnjoman1 2 года назад +1

    Hi Nami, love all your Japanese dishes. I cook Japanese food at least three or four times a week and every single one of them following your great recipes and videos of it. Thank you for sharing. I want to know if for this recipe can I use white miso?

    • @justonecookbook
      @justonecookbook  2 года назад +1

      Thank you so much! I'm so happy to hear you enjoy my recipes. Sure! It'll be milder (less salty) in taste.

  • @-RONNIE
    @-RONNIE 3 года назад

    Nice video 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @jerrypierreponte5864
    @jerrypierreponte5864 3 года назад

    A Mackerel Dish! Nice! I wonder how it would taste if I substituted the Mackerel with Flying Fish? 🤔Oh well... Guess I have to go shopping this weekend 😁 ありがとうございます!

    • @justonecookbook
      @justonecookbook  3 года назад +1

      Hi Jerry! I've never tried it with frying fish (Tobiuo 飛び魚 in Japanese) but when I googled in Japanese, some people do use it for a similar dish. So I guess it's possible?

  • @jasontheworldisyours
    @jasontheworldisyours 3 года назад

    Flavorful

  • @veronicak3835
    @veronicak3835 2 месяца назад

    me and my hubby love this recipe! one question, why do you cool it down and trun the heat back on again at the end? is it better flavor than just cook&eat?

    • @justonecookbook
      @justonecookbook  2 месяца назад

      All simmering dishes taste best when cooled and reheated. While cooling, the ingredients absorb all of the wonderful savory flavors. 🙂

  • @altamiravivencias9868
    @altamiravivencias9868 3 года назад +2

    Thanks for the video...often comes to mind how oriental recipes nowadays incorporated white sugar.

    • @justonecookbook
      @justonecookbook  3 года назад +5

      Sugar (or mirin) is always included in the Japanese savory recipes because the common condiments, soy sauce and miso, are salty on its own. You have to balance out the flavors. Japanese cooking's focus is always ingredient's flavor, so we don't overpower with too much sauce (look how much sauce was needed to cook), so the amount of sugar/salt consumption is not that much after all. Often times, westernized Japanese food tends to be too saucy (using so much condiments)... not tasting original ingredients flavor.

    • @altamiravivencias9868
      @altamiravivencias9868 3 года назад +1

      @@justonecookbook thanks for answering. It is not only here, modern oriental cuisine, seems to me have incorporated white sugar widely . We don't see it so much in older recipies. I especially love japoneses food

  • @keokih689
    @keokih689 3 года назад

    Have you tried using a spoon to skin the ginger 👍

  • @ameliathaxter5466
    @ameliathaxter5466 Год назад

    Is this mackerel, the same as salt mackerel

  • @animeloverXinuyasha
    @animeloverXinuyasha 3 года назад

    Please could you just clarify - after adding extra miso and soy sauce, do you remove from heat and just let it rest (and soak up flavour?) for half an hour? Then just reheat it before serving?

  • @YRKM-tb5fm
    @YRKM-tb5fm 3 года назад

    What type of sake did you use- drinking sake or cooking sake?

  • @Justswingingalong22
    @Justswingingalong22 3 года назад

    Could you possibly use skin-on salmon or another fish? I do not have mackerel available where I am currently living 😞

  • @choiyie_
    @choiyie_ 3 года назад

    Can we skip sake? 🥺

  • @joeri666
    @joeri666 3 года назад +1

    Why do you Blanche it first?

    • @justonecookbook
      @justonecookbook  3 года назад +2

      I explained a bit more on my website, but it's to remove unwanted smell, sliminess, blood, and to firm up the texture of the fish so it can absorb the flavors in the simmering process. In Japan, this technique is called Shimofuri 霜降り.

  • @miekie1991
    @miekie1991 3 года назад

    Can I also make this recipe with smoked mackerel? In our country clean mackerel is a bit more difficult to get, but smoked mackerel is very easy to find

  • @sonyhk3824
    @sonyhk3824 3 года назад

    👍

  • @janie7242
    @janie7242 3 года назад

    Is the white miso, also OK? I only have a white one at home, the red one had a stronger flavor. I prefer a white one~ Kansai region, not Tokyo red miso. 😋🤭

  • @Hyopomora
    @Hyopomora 3 года назад

    Is it better to get fish from a market or local grocery??

    • @justonecookbook
      @justonecookbook  3 года назад +1

      I'm not sure where you live... but in my area (I live in SF Bay Area), I can get mackerel fillets at Japanese/Korean/Chinese markets. This particular one is from Suruki Market in San Mateo, and I asked the fish monger to fillet the whole fish.

    • @Hyopomora
      @Hyopomora 3 года назад

      @@justonecookbook ah, I live in the Midwest I do have a few Korean/Japanese stores around me so I will look there. Thank you!