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Nationwide Japan, bamboo mat craft with ancient origins
Japanese Sudare and Makisu: Rolling Mat Techniques Beyond Maki
Nationwide Japan, bamboo mat craft with ancient origins
The sudare (bamboo blind) and makisu (bamboo rolling mat, used for sushi) represent a category of Japanese culinary equipment often reduced to a single application—maki sushi—when in fact the rolling mat tradition encompasses far wider technique. The makisu (typically 27 × 27cm for maki, or the larger 27 × 32cm for temaki and omelet rolls) functions as a forming and compression tool for any preparation that benefits from a cylindrical shape or firm surface compression. Beyond sushi rolls: tamago yaki shaping (the just-cooked tamagoyaki is rolled and pressed in the makisu to set its rectangular shape), tofu pressing (silken tofu wrapped and squeezed gently to reduce moisture before slicing), rolled age (deep-fried tofu skin wrapped around fillings and re-fried), and the elegant Japanese omelet roll (dashimaki tamago) rely on the mat's controlled compression. The sudare is larger (30 × 36cm+) and used for shaping steamed items, presenting food on hot days as a visible ventilation platform, and rolling larger preparations like onigiri-shaped steamed fish. Material and maintenance matter: bamboo mats should never be soaked (the bamboo swells and warps), cleaned with a fine brush under running water, and dried completely before storage to prevent mold. Food contact surfaces should be wrapped in plastic film before use with raw fish to prevent cross-contamination.
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