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Japan — traditional Japanese vinegar cuisine (su-no-mono) traditions Techniques

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Japan — traditional Japanese vinegar cuisine (su-no-mono) traditions
Japanese Awase-Su and Sanbai-Su: Vinegar Blend Science
Japan — traditional Japanese vinegar cuisine (su-no-mono) traditions
Japanese cooking employs a systematic approach to vinegar-based seasonings that goes far beyond simply using rice vinegar — there are established blend formulas for specific applications, each with names and prescribed ratios. Understanding these blends unlocks the entire category of sunomono (vinegared dishes), su-miso (vinegar-miso preparations), and su-based sauces. Awase-su (合わせ酢, 'combined vinegar'): the base vinegar blend for most sunomono. Standard ratio: 4 parts rice vinegar, 2 parts sugar, 1 part salt. The salt moderates the vinegar's sharpness; the sugar softens the acidity and adds roundness. Sanbai-su (三杯酢, 'three-cup vinegar'): the most common all-purpose sunomono dressing — 3 parts rice vinegar, 2 parts soy sauce, 1 part mirin. The soy adds colour, savouriness, and umami; the mirin adds sweetness and body. Tosazu (土佐酢): similar to sanbai-su but with added dashi and katsuobushi — produces a richer, more complex base. Nihai-su (二杯酢, 'two-cup vinegar'): rice vinegar and soy sauce only, no sweetener — the most austere, used for very delicate preparations where sweetness would intrude.
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