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| Sushi (alt.food.sushi) For talking sushi. (Sashimi, wasabi, miso soup, and other elements of the sushi experience are valid topics.) Sushi is a broad topic; discussions range from preparation to methods of eating to favorite kinds to good restaurants. |
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As others have answered you, it is a Japanese horseradish.
I simply wanted to mention that I prefer using regular horseradish, which is less strong so you can actually taste it beyond the hotness. You could buy a bottle of white prepared horseradish. What I do is buy a piece of fresh horseradish and make thin peels of it with a peeler and let it dry. When it's dry I pulverize it in a small blender or food processor. When I want to use it I simply mix some with water. On 15 Oct 2005 09:21:45 -0700, wrote: What exactly is that spicy green mustard-like stuff they serve with sushi, and can you buy it in stores. |
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I can only tell you about my direct experience, since I have both in
the house. Dried, powdered American horseradish is less hot, thus more flavorful. On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 21:56:50 -0400, shawn wrote: On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 17:26:05 GMT, Gary wrote: As others have answered you, it is a Japanese horseradish. I simply wanted to mention that I prefer using regular horseradish, which is less strong so you can actually taste it beyond the hotness. I thought the real stuff (wasabi) is less strong than the regular horseradish. At least that's what I've heard before on a couple of shows about sushi. (Kind of interesting that I saw an episode of "Good Eats" on sushi this week and this weekend WPBA (Atlanta PBS station) had one of the local sushi chefs doing a show on making sushi.) |
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shawn wrote:
On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 17:26:05 GMT, Gary wrote: As others have answered you, it is a Japanese horseradish. I simply wanted to mention that I prefer using regular horseradish, which is less strong so you can actually taste it beyond the hotness. I thought the real stuff (wasabi) is less strong than the regular horseradish. At least that's what I've heard before on a couple of shows about sushi. (Kind of interesting that I saw an episode of "Good Eats" on sushi this week and this weekend WPBA (Atlanta PBS station) had one of the local sushi chefs doing a show on making sushi.) The last time I had real wasabi, it was freshly grated. It didn't have as much of the vaporous nasal burn, and bit of a different flavor and of course texture. -- Dan |
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