Japanese Katsuo Dashi Second Dashi Nibandashi Utilisation and Zero-Waste Stock Philosophy
Japan (national; codified in kaiseki and professional Japanese cookery tradition)
The Japanese dashi system is built on a two-extraction philosophy that eliminates waste while calibrating flavour intensity to application. Ichiban dashi (一番だし — 'first dashi') is the premium, delicate extraction used for clear soups, chawanmushi, and high-end suimono where transparency and subtlety define quality. After ichiban dashi production, the spent konbu and katsuobushi retain significant flavour compounds and are never discarded in a professional kitchen. Niban dashi (二番だし — 'second dashi') extracts the remaining glutamates, inosinate, and minerals from the spent ingredients through a longer, more vigorous simmering (10–15 minutes), producing a darker, more robust stock used for nimono (simmered dishes), miso soup, and any preparation that can accommodate fuller-bodied flavour. Beyond niban dashi, the spent konbu is repurposed: simmered konbu becomes konbu no tsukudani (soy-simmered konbu) or thinly sliced for salads. Spent katsuobushi becomes furikake (dried mixed seasoning) when combined with soy, mirin, and sesame. This system — ichiban → niban → tsukudani/furikake — represents Japanese mottainai (無駄のない — 'no waste') philosophy at its most systematic.