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Making Japanese Food; Where to Start? - Printable Version +- kanji koohii FORUM (http://forum.koohii.com) +-- Forum: Learning Japanese (http://forum.koohii.com/forum-4.html) +--- Forum: Off topic (http://forum.koohii.com/forum-13.html) +--- Thread: Making Japanese Food; Where to Start? (/thread-4989.html) |
Making Japanese Food; Where to Start? - SomeCallMeChris - 2011-10-20 I am a professional chef (in western cuisine), and my knife kit that I take to work every day has three knives, - a good chef's knife ($270 if I'd bought it separately, but I got it through my culinary school in a package deal) - a good paring knife (around $40 if bought separately) - a not-so-great but does the job bread knife that I should really upgrade. The rest of the knives, you don't really need unless you do what we like to euphemistically call 'protein fabrication' in schools, which is a general term for gutting, skinning, fileting, boning, and butchering either whole animals or large cuts into portions. The only other knife I use at all is a carving knife. You don't need one of these, but if you host large parties with roasts, they're nice to have for carving turkeys and slicing ham and so on. If you only have a turkey once a year on Thanksgiving (or less than that for those not in the U.S.), just use your chef's knife for that too. I'm not actually into Japanese cooking so much so I'm not quite sure what the proper term is for the mid-sized blade that in America we call 'santoku', but a 8-10" one of those serves every purpose a chef's knife does and can replace one. You don't actually need a western blade for western cooking and an eastern blade for eastern cooking, they serve the same purpose and aren't -that- different in shapes. You will, however, really notice the difference in quality. A high quality knife holds an edge for much longer and can cut much better at its sharpest. You should hone your knives on a honing steel every day that you cook, and sharpen them once every two or three months if you're cooking one meal a day. (I hone mine after every couple hours of use and sharpen them once a month or so.) Ceramic knives need a different sort of care, I've heard a few contradictory things but don't really know. I've never seen one in actual use in a professional kitchen. On a separate note, if you grab NTKTV's application you can get free access to NHK-E, which means you can watch cooking shows, mostly きょうの料理 which is sometimes interesting and sometimes not so much. PS- one place your Japanese knife might differ - some of them are only beveled on one side, and so should only be sharpened on one side, though the other side should be gently honed held almost flat to the steel. Some Japanese knives are beveled on both sides, and can be treated like western knives, but I don't know the particulars on which names go with which type of edge. Making Japanese Food; Where to Start? - bertoni - 2011-10-20 The deba, yanagi, and usuba traditionally are all one-sided beveled. The knives that are two-sided are mostly or just those based on Western designs, like the santoku. I bought a friend a 300 mm forged yanagi. It was a great knife, if a bit scary to some, but I wouldn't use one much. Making Japanese Food; Where to Start? - chamcham - 2011-10-24 Ajinomoto has a Youtube channel for recipes. The recipes and short and since the videos are in Japanese, they are good for studying cooking terminology. Main channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/AjinomotoRecipe Playlists (NOTE: these videos are not listed under Uploads section, you have to click on Playlists): 【おすすめ定番メニュー:レシピ大百科】 (Standard Japanese dishes) http://www.youtube.com/user/AjinomotoRecipe#p/c/1FCC6609C9A40C2B 【料理の基本】 (Basics of Cooking) <-- You probably want to see these http://www.youtube.com/user/AjinomotoRecipe#p/c/8100B3F1D0CBBAF1 【肉のおかず: レシピ大百科】- Meat side dishes http://www.youtube.com/user/AjinomotoRecipe#p/c/FDBE5485C4A052A9 【魚のおかず:レシピ大百科】Fish side dishes http://www.youtube.com/user/AjinomotoRecipe#p/c/B2A661E84C8F9A4B 【野菜のおかず:レシピ大百科】Vegetable side dishes http://www.youtube.com/user/AjinomotoRecipe#p/c/BEC663051CEC084F 【ごはん・めん類:レシピ大百科】Rice and noodles http://www.youtube.com/user/AjinomotoRecipe#p/c/9374533AB67B719E 【汁もの・スープ:レシピ大百科】Soups http://www.youtube.com/user/AjinomotoRecipe#p/c/76087EB4490C602A 【鍋:レシピ大百科】One-pot dishes http://www.youtube.com/user/AjinomotoRecipe#p/c/7800CF3C2473884D In the "Basics of Cooking" playlist, they even have knife skill (切り方) videos . NOTE: Japanese knives are never supposed to be honed with a sharpening steel. It changes the shape of the blade. For knife care instructions, go here: (http://korin.com/Learn/Knife-Care). For sharpening instructions, go here: (http://korin.com/Learn/Sharpening). Making Japanese Food; Where to Start? - kainzero - 2011-10-24 i tried the katsuramuki cut yesterday. i cut my thumb three times. >_<; now i understand why the usuba is single-beveled and completely flat. don't use your german chef knife for this one. |