041 Nitsuke
Ingredients
| 225g | cod fillets, skin on (or other white fish) |
| 1g | Diamond Crystal kosher salt |
| 75g | gobo (burdock root), cut into thin strips |
| 1 knob | ginger (4cm), peeled and thinly sliced |
Simmering Broth
| 180g | water |
| 1 piece | kombu (5 x 7.5cm), soaked in the water |
| 60g | sake |
| 60g | mirin |
| 20g | sugar |
| 45g | soy sauce |
Steps
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Sprinkle salt on both sides of the fish. Rest 10–15 minutes, then pat dry with paper towels.
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Soak kombu in the water to make a cold-brew dashi. Cut and soak gobo in water for 5–10 minutes, drain. Slice ginger.
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Blanch the fish: bring water to a boil, turn off heat, add fish for 15–20 seconds until surface turns white. Transfer to ice water for 10 seconds, pat dry.
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Add the kombu dashi, kombu, and sake to a saucepan. Place fish on top of the kombu, skin side up. Add gobo. Bring to a gentle boil over medium heat. Skim scum. Remove kombu.
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Add ginger, mirin, and sugar. Place a drop lid (otoshibuta) directly on the fish. Reduce heat and simmer gently for 5 minutes.
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Lift the drop lid, add soy sauce. Replace lid and simmer another 5 minutes, spooning broth over the fish occasionally.
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Turn off heat. Cool completely in the broth — this is where the fish absorbs moisture and flavor.
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Reheat gently when ready to serve. Plate fish and gobo, spoon broth on top.
Notes
- Salting draws out moisture and fishy odor. Don’t skip it, but keep it light — too much toughens the fish.
- The blanch (shimo-furi) removes surface proteins and odor for a clean sauce. Just 15–20 seconds — you’re not cooking the fish.
- Soy sauce goes in halfway through simmering. Adding salt early prevents sweetness from penetrating.
- A drop lid keeps the fish intact, retains moisture, and circulates broth evenly. Make one from foil if you don’t have a wooden or metal one.
- Cooling in the broth is the key step — the fish reabsorbs liquid and seasons deeply. Even better the next day.
- Works with any white fish: yellowtail, black cod, flounder, snapper, rockfish.
- Keeps refrigerated 2–3 days, frozen up to a month.