Karei no Nitsuke Simmered Flounder in Sake and Soy
Japan — traditional nimono (simmered dish) technique; karei the quintessential fish for home nimono
Karei no nitsuke is considered Japan's definitive home-cooking fish dish — a simmered flounder (or similar flatfish) in a concentrated broth of sake, mirin, soy sauce, and dashi or water, producing a lacquered, glossy finish on the fish and an intensely savoury reduction sauce. The technique is the foundation of all Japanese nimono (simmered dish) preparation for fish. Key principles: the cooking liquid ratio (sake:mirin:soy approximately 2:1:1 with added water, adjusted to taste), the otoshibuta (drop lid) technique, and the timing of liquid reduction. Otoshibuta is a lid slightly smaller than the cooking vessel placed directly on the surface of the simmering food — this creates even liquid circulation, prevents the fish from moving, and allows sufficient evaporation for reduction while keeping fish moist and preventing surface drying. In professional practice, an aluminium foil or baking parchment circle with a central hole is used; at home, a real wooden otoshibuta is a valued kitchen tool. The two-stage technique for whole flatfish: flash-blanching (shimo-furi — literally 'frost sprinkling') before simmering removes surface proteins and scales residue, producing a cleaner-flavoured dish. Bring water to boil, submerge fish briefly until surface whitens, remove and plunge in cold water, then proceed to nimono. This pre-treatment is often skipped in home cooking but is standard in professional preparation.