Nishime — Simmered New Year Vegetables
Japan-wide — nishime as celebration dish with strongest association to New Year osechi
Nishime (煮しめ, literally 'firmly simmered') is the generic term for a range of simmered vegetable and protein preparations traditionally made for New Year (osechi) and large celebrations where the dish must hold up for multiple days. Nishime ingredients: renkon (lotus root, auspicious for 'seeing the future through the holes'), gobo (burdock root, wish for long healthy roots), konnyaku, satoimo (taro — for family multiplying, as the taro mother plant produces many child corms), carrot (for colour), takenoko (bamboo shoot, when in season), shiitake, abura-age, and occasionally chicken. Each ingredient may be simmered separately in the same flavoured dashi to preserve its individual character, then arranged together in the final presentation. The term 'nishime' describes the technique of simmering until the liquid is fully absorbed — the finished vegetables should be coated with glaze, not sitting in liquid.