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Japan — Kyoto/Nara, medieval period Techniques

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Japan — Kyoto/Nara, medieval period
Japanese Dengaku: Skewered and Miso-Glazed Foods
Japan — Kyoto/Nara, medieval period
Dengaku (田楽) is one of Japan's oldest festival foods — skewered foods coated in flavoured miso paste and grilled over charcoal until the miso is caramelised and fragrant. The name derives from dengaku-mai, the ancient rice-paddy dance performed at agricultural festivals where performers balanced on stilts — the visual resemblance between a performer balanced on stilts and food balanced on a vertical skewer gave the dish its name. The technique is applied to an array of foods: tofu dengaku (the most famous), konnyaku dengaku, eggplant dengaku, daikon dengaku, and sometimes fish and shellfish. The miso paste used for coating is not plain miso but dengaku-miso: a sweetened, seasoned paste made from white, red, or hatcho miso blended with mirin, sake, and egg yolk, cooked briefly to thicken. Different-coloured miso preparations create the classic 'kinkashi' presentation (white miso on one half, red miso on the other) that is iconic in formal dengaku service. The key technique is the double-phase application: a first coat of dengaku-miso is applied, the food grilled until just set, then a second coat applied and grilled until caramelised and slightly charred at the edges. This two-coat method builds a richer, more complex glaze than a single application.
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