Japan; fundamental technique across all Japanese cooking traditions; Kyoto and Edo schools with slight variations
Ichiban dashi ('first dashi') is the pristine primary extraction of katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes) and kombu seaweed—the foundation of Japanese cuisine's flavor infrastructure, and arguably the most important technique in Japanese cooking. Its function is analogous to French fond blanc but it works through completely different mechanisms: not protein gelatin from long simmered bones, but glutamate from kombu and inosinate from katsuobushi—two different umami compounds that create a synergistic effect approximately 8x greater than either alone. The technique requires extreme restraint to achieve clarity: kombu is cold-soaked in water for minimum 30 minutes (preferably overnight), then heated slowly to 60-70°C and held for 30 minutes—never boiled, which releases bitter compounds. The kombu is removed before bringing to near-boil. Katsuobushi is added, submerged briefly for one minute at just-under-boil, then the heat is turned off and the bonito allowed to settle for 3-5 minutes before straining through muslin. The result is a crystal-clear, pale amber liquid with complex, deep savory character that functions as the base for clear soups, chawanmushi, nimono, and sauces. Niban dashi (second dashi) reuses the spent ingredients for robust miso soups.
Crystal-clear pale amber; profound savory depth without heaviness; clean finish; synergistic umami complexity
{"Glutamate (kombu) + inosinate (katsuobushi) synergy creates 8x greater umami than either alone","Kombu temperature must never exceed 75°C—above this releases bitter slippery compounds","Cold soak kombu minimum 30 minutes, preferably overnight, for maximum glutamate extraction","Katsuobushi steep for 3-5 minutes after heat removed—extended infusion produces harsh flavor","Strain through muslin cloth for clarity—pressing the kombu or bonito clouds and bitters the dashi"}
{"Cold-infusion kombu overnight in refrigerator and strain without heating for the clearest possible dashi","Ichiban dashi flavor is so clear and clean it requires only minimal seasoning in clear soups","Use within 24 hours; flavor deteriorates rapidly with oxidation","Freeze in ice cube trays for convenient portion-sized dashi for quick preparations"}
{"Boiling kombu—the most common error; produces bitter, slimy dashi","Squeezing the bonito or kombu through the strainer adding bitterness and cloudiness","Using commercial dashi powder for dishes where fresh dashi would reveal quality difference","Reusing ichiban dashi spent ingredients without making niban dashi from them first"}
Shizuo Tsuji — Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art