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Japan — chawanmushi (茶碗蒸し) as Kyushu and kaiseki tradition; name means 'tea bowl steamed' Techniques

1 technique from Japan — chawanmushi (茶碗蒸し) as Kyushu and kaiseki tradition; name means 'tea bowl steamed' cuisine

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Japan — chawanmushi (茶碗蒸し) as Kyushu and kaiseki tradition; name means 'tea bowl steamed'
Japanese Chawanmushi Steamed Savoury Egg Custard
Japan — chawanmushi (茶碗蒸し) as Kyushu and kaiseki tradition; name means 'tea bowl steamed'
Chawanmushi (茶碗蒸し, 'tea bowl steamed') — a silky, barely-set savoury egg custard steamed in a lidded ceramic cup — is one of Japanese cuisine's most technically demanding preparations and the dish that most reveals a kitchen's precision and ingredient quality. The egg-to-dashi ratio determines everything: too much egg relative to dashi produces a rubbery, dense result; too little egg produces a fragile custard that cannot support its filling ingredients. Professional ratio: approximately 1 egg per 180–200ml of cold dashi, with a small amount of soy and salt for seasoning. The temperature management for steaming is the primary technical challenge: if the steam is too vigorous, the custard bubbles and develops a pitted, sponge-like surface (sukiyaki-zuke, called 'rabbit holes') rather than the smooth, mirror-like ideal; if the steam is too gentle, the custard never fully sets. Professional solution: steam at high heat for the first 2 minutes until the top just begins to set, then reduce steam significantly and continue for 12–14 minutes at low heat. The lid on the steamer must be slightly ajar to allow steam pressure regulation. Fillings: small pieces of chicken thigh (pre-cooked), prawn (raw — the residual heat sets them), gingko nuts (ginnan, autumn), lily bulb (yuri-ne, winter), shiitake mushroom cap, trefoil (mitsuba) added near the end. The surface of served chawanmushi should be trembling-barely-set, mirror-smooth, with no pitting.
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