Torigara Chicken Bone Dashi Stock
Japan (universal stock-making tradition across all Japanese regional cuisines)
Torigara (鶏がら, 'chicken carcass') dashi is a light chicken bone stock that occupies a middle ground in Japanese cooking — more robust and gelatinous than delicate kombu-katsuobushi ichiban dashi, but far lighter and more neutral than Western-style chicken stock. The carcasses (including backs, necks, and feet when available) are first blanched in boiling water to purge blood and impurities, then rinsed and started in cold water. Unlike Western stocks which simmer for hours, torigara dashi for Japanese applications is typically simmered for only 1–2 hours and kept at a constant bare simmer rather than a rolling boil to maintain clarity. Aromatics are minimal — ginger slices and negi (green onion) — preserving the clean neutral character. Torigara dashi is fundamental to tonkotsu-adjacent ramen broths, oyakodon simmering liquid, Japanese-style chicken hot pots (mizutaki), Chinese-influenced wa-chuka dishes, and any application where kombu-katsuobushi dashi would be too delicate but a heavy European chicken stock would overpower. The resulting stock should be barely golden, clear, mildly gelatinous when chilled.