Vegan Recipe for Iced Summer ‘Somen’ with Lemon by Tim Anderson
Despite often being eclipsed by the popular ramen, soba, and udon, somen are an integral Japanese summer noodle dish.
© Synchronique Éditions
In his book Vegan Japaneasy, American chef Tim Anderson decided to feature somen alongside ramen and soba.
These very fine wheat noodles are served in a half-playful, half-spectacular manner in Japanese restaurants. The nagashi somen (nagashi comes from the verb nagasu, meaning ‘to spill’) are cooked and then cooled, before being placed on a long flume of bamboo with water flowing down it, to arrive in front of diners who catch them with their chopsticks.
‘Don’t worry, you don’t need to cut down any bamboo or get your hosepipe out to enjoy these’, Tim Anderson explains with amusement before outlining his recipe. And his final piece of advice? ‘Make this dish on the hottest day of the year or whenever you need a little noodle-based refreshment!’
Serves 4
Ingredients
1 lemon
1 l dashi
4 tbsp soy sauce
1 tbsp mirin
½ cucumber, deseeded and julienned
½ green apple or Japanese pear, cored and julienned
50 g chopped radish
2 chopped spring onions
1 handful pea shoots
1 piece (1 cm) fresh ginger, peeled and finely grated
4 portions raw somen
1 tbsp sesame seeds
1 tsp sesame oil
Method
Using a peeler, peel the lemon, making sure not to leave too much of the white flesh.
Wring out the lemon peel over the dashi to extract its oil, then add the soy sauce, mirin, and lemon juice.
Place in the freezer while you prepare the other ingredients.
The dashi needs to be half-frozen: not like melted snow, but rather like a lake covered with a fine layer of ice in winter. Leave it to stand for 30 minutes, perhaps a little longer. Once it starts to freeze, remove the lemon peel and throw it away.
Meanwhile, prepare the vegetables.
Bring a large saucepan of water to the boil and cook the somen according to the instructions on the packaging—the cooking time must be very brief, roughly one minute, or even less—then drain them very carefully and rinse them under a large quantity of cold water to stop them cooking and get rid of their excess starch.
Divide the somen into four shallow bowls, pour the half-frozen dashi over them, and gently mix the noodles using chopsticks.
Garnish with the vegetables, pea shoots, sesame seeds, and a few drops of sesame oil.
Vegan JapanEasy (2020), a recipe book by Tim Anderson, is published by Hardie Grant.
Tim Anderson is an American chef who won the 2011 series of MasterChef UK. Having graduated in 2006 from Occidental College in Los Angeles, where he studied the history of Japanese cuisine, he then lived in Japan for two years, in Fukuoka. He now lives in London, where he runs two Japanese restaurants: Nanban Brixton and Nanban Central. Vegan JapanEasy is his latest book, following Nanban, JapanEasy, and Tokyo Stories.
© Hardie Grant
TRENDING
-
A House from the Taisho Era Reveals Its Secrets
While visiting an abandoned building, Hamish Campbell discovered photographs the owner had taken of the place in the 1920s.
-
The Taboo-Breaking Erotica of Toshio Saeki
The master of the 1970s Japanese avant-garde reimagined his most iconic artworks for a limited box set with silkscreen artist Fumie Taniyama.
-
With Meisa Fujishiro, Tokyo's Nudes Stand Tall
In the series 'Sketches of Tokyo', the photographer revisits the genre by bringing it face to face with the capital's architecture.
-
Masahisa Fukase's Family Portraits
In his series ‘Family’, the photographer compiles surprising photos in which he questions death, the inescapable.
-
Hajime Sorayama's Futuristic Eroticism
The illustrator is the pioneer for a form of hyperrealism that combines sensuality and technology and depicts sexualised robots.