Provenance Technique Library

Japan-wide — aemono as a fundamental side dish category throughout Japanese culinary history Techniques

1 technique from Japan-wide — aemono as a fundamental side dish category throughout Japanese culinary history cuisine

Clear filters
1 result
Japan-wide — aemono as a fundamental side dish category throughout Japanese culinary history
Aemono — Dressed Vegetable Preparations
Japan-wide — aemono as a fundamental side dish category throughout Japanese culinary history
Aemono (和え物, dressed foods) is the category of Japanese preparations where cooked (or occasionally raw) vegetables, seafood, or tofu are dressed with a flavoured sauce or paste — essentially Japanese salads, though always served at room temperature or slightly chilled, never cold. The dressings (ae-koromo, 'dressing cloak') include: goma-ae (ground sesame); shira-ae (white tofu dressing — mashed tofu with sesame, miso, and soy); kuni-ae (Japanese walnut dressing); su-mise (vinegar-miso); and karashi-ae (mustard-soy dressing). Aemono represents the 'dressed cold side dish' component of ichiju-sansai meals. The art is in the balance of the dressing — it should enhance the vegetable's natural flavour without masking it; in the timing — vegetables should be dressed immediately before serving (early dressing causes weeping and dilution); and in the textural compatibility between dressing consistency and ingredient texture.
salad technique