Thinking back, my grandmother who has never tasted Japanese food before, knew how to mix the sauce such that it tasted exactly the same as those I ate in restaurant. It was amazing! Now that my grandmother has passed on, I try to replicate this dish in remembrance of her. In this recipe, instead of using vermicelli/cha soba/ramen, I replaced it with soumen (It is a type of white Japanese noodles made of wheat flour. Unlike udon, soumen are very thin, less than 1.3mm in diameter.)
Grandma, this is for you! :)
Recipe
Preparation time: 30 minutes (excluding cutting/shredding ingredients)
Serving: 4 pax
Ingredients:
150g soumen (I would recommend this brand, 'Nissin No. 1 Soumen Dried Noodle' as the texture is smooth and silky when cooked)
Toppings:
1 Japanese cucumber (cut into fine strips / shredded)
1 medium carrot (cut into fine strips / shredded)
8pcs of crabstick (teared into fine strips)
For the egg:
4 eggs (separate into 2 portions and cut into fine strips after pan-fry)
1 tsp sugar
1 tbsp mirin
Dressing:
8 tbsp japanese shoyu (men-tsuyu: for dipping soba noodles)
2 tbsp water (you may add more water if you find it the shoyu salty)
2 tsp sugar
1 tbsp rice vinegar (omit if you don't like vinegar)
1 tsp sesame oil
Instructions:
1. Mix the dressing and set aside.
2. Cook soumen in boiling water. When it's half-cooked (i.e. translucent), remove it from the boiling water and soak it in ice water for about a minute. Strain it and place on the serving dish.
3. Place shredded cucumber, egg, carrot and crabstick in this order on top of the soumen.
4. Pour in the dressing.
4. Serve immediately.
Nissin Soumen Dried Noodle
You may wish to sprinkle sesame seeds or add thin strips of seaweed on top as garnish before serving.
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