Japan (Kyoto as primary dengaku culture; widespread in kaiseki and izakaya cooking)
Dengaku (literally 'field music' — from the rural festival dancers who wore white robes and stilts resembling the long-handled skewers) is a presentation and preparation method where ingredients are skewered and coated with sweet miso paste, then grilled or broiled until the miso caramelises into a deeply flavoured, slightly charred glaze. The dengaku preparation transforms both the ingredient and the miso: the ingredient's surface chars while the interior cooks gently under the insulating miso layer, and the miso itself undergoes Maillard reactions that deepen its flavour from fermented paste to complex sweet-savory char. The dengaku miso (den-miso) is prepared separately: white or red miso is combined with mirin, sake, and sugar, then cooked down to a spreadable paste of about 70% moisture content — this concentration ensures it adheres to the ingredient rather than running off, and caramelises rather than burning. Classic dengaku ingredients: tofu (momen firm tofu, drained and grilled), konnyaku (the resilience holds up to heat), eggplant (the dense flesh absorbs miso through the surface), and daikon (winter dengaku, the classic Kyoto expression). The skewer format — traditionally thin cedar or bamboo skewers — elevates the preparation visually, mimicking the long-handled appearance of the dengaku dancers' implements. In kaiseki, dengaku appears as an autumn course with red miso; in izakaya, dengaku konnyaku is a standing preparation throughout the year.
Sweet, caramelised miso depth — Maillard browning transforming fermented paste into complex sweet-savory char
{"Den-miso: miso reduced with mirin-sake-sugar to 70% moisture, spreadable paste that caramelises cleanly","Maillard reactions on miso produce the characteristic char — the deep flavour comes from browning","Ingredient must be pre-cooked or dry before miso application — wet surfaces prevent adhesion","Cedar or bamboo skewers are visual reference to the dengaku dancer historical origin","Temperature: moderate high heat (200°C oven or charcoal) — too hot burns, too low doesn't caramelise"}
{"Den-miso base: 100g white miso + 3 tbsp mirin + 2 tbsp sake + 1 tbsp sugar — cook stirring until thick","Two-colour dengaku: white miso on one side, red miso on the other — visual and flavour contrast","Tofu dengaku: press tofu 30 minutes, cut into 4cm blocks, pan-sear dry until golden, then coat and broil","Pairing: dengaku with warm junmai sake or cold barley tea — the sweet-savory miso glaze matches both"}
{"Using cold, undiluted miso directly — produces burning char rather than caramelisation","Applying miso to wet tofu — slides off without adhesion","Broiling from too far away — miso must be close to heat source for efficient caramelisation","Using too thick a miso application — thick layers burn on the surface before the interior heats"}
Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art — Shizuo Tsuji; Kaiseki: The Exquisite Cuisine of Kyoto's Kikunoi Restaurant