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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Forgive a first time poster here but back when I was in culinary school one
of my classmates was from Hawaii. She and one of my Chef Instructors always lamented over not being able to find a good place to get this one particular dish from Hawaii, here on the continent. The name was something like Spamomisubi (or something close) Does this sound familiar to anyone and if so, can you point me in the direction of a recipe/formula for it? TIA Bsaudet |
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On 8/27/7004, Brandon wrote:
>Forgive a first time poster here but back when I was in >culinary school one of my classmates was from Hawaii. >She and one of my Chef Instructors always lamented over >not being able to find a good place to get this one particular >dish from Hawaii, here on the continent. The name was something >like Spamomisubi (or something close) >Does this sound familiar to anyone and if so, can you point me in the >direction of a recipe/formula for it? From the Spam website (www.Spam.com): SPAM Musubi Servings: 2 Prep Time: 30 minutes Cook Time: 15 minutes Ingredients 2 slices SPAM® Classic 3 ounces cooked white rice (seasoned with furikake and toasted sesame seeds, if desired) 1 tablespoon HOUSE OF TSANG® HIBACHI GRILL® sweet ginger sesame sauce OR SAM CHOY'S Cooking Sauce 1 nori ** Directions In large skillel, brown SPAM until it is lightly browned and crisp. Place half of the rice into a musubi press or small can. Place the SPAM® on the rice and drizzle with grill sauce or cooking sauce. Top with the remaining rice and press. Remove SPAM and rice from the musubi press or can. Place on sheet of nori (shiny side down) and wrap. Cut each musubi in half. Slice each half, diagonally in half again. Serve immediately. * Furikake: Dried seaweed with seasoning used in Japanese cooking. ** Nori: Paper-thin sheets of dried seaweed. May be purchased in Japanese markets or specialty sections of large supermarkets. |
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On 8/27/7004, Brandon wrote:
>Forgive a first time poster here but back when I was in >culinary school one of my classmates was from Hawaii. >She and one of my Chef Instructors always lamented over >not being able to find a good place to get this one particular >dish from Hawaii, here on the continent. The name was something >like Spamomisubi (or something close) >Does this sound familiar to anyone and if so, can you point me in the >direction of a recipe/formula for it? From the Spam website (www.Spam.com): SPAM Musubi Servings: 2 Prep Time: 30 minutes Cook Time: 15 minutes Ingredients 2 slices SPAM® Classic 3 ounces cooked white rice (seasoned with furikake and toasted sesame seeds, if desired) 1 tablespoon HOUSE OF TSANG® HIBACHI GRILL® sweet ginger sesame sauce OR SAM CHOY'S Cooking Sauce 1 nori ** Directions In large skillel, brown SPAM until it is lightly browned and crisp. Place half of the rice into a musubi press or small can. Place the SPAM® on the rice and drizzle with grill sauce or cooking sauce. Top with the remaining rice and press. Remove SPAM and rice from the musubi press or can. Place on sheet of nori (shiny side down) and wrap. Cut each musubi in half. Slice each half, diagonally in half again. Serve immediately. * Furikake: Dried seaweed with seasoning used in Japanese cooking. ** Nori: Paper-thin sheets of dried seaweed. May be purchased in Japanese markets or specialty sections of large supermarkets. |
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"Kevintsheehy" wrote:
> On 8/27/7004, Brandon wrote: > > >Forgive a first time poster here but back when I was in > >culinary school one of my classmates was from Hawaii. > >She and one of my Chef Instructors always lamented over > >not being able to find a good place to get this one particular > >dish from Hawaii, here on the continent. The name was something > >like Spamomisubi (or something close) > > >Does this sound familiar to anyone and if so, can you point me in the > >direction of a recipe/formula for it? > > From the Spam website (www.Spam.com): > > SPAM Musubi... <snip> I used to enjoy the good ol' "Hawaiian Spamburger," but I don't think I'd ever confuse it with a regional delicacy. <especially if I was a culinary school instructor ![]() |
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"Kevintsheehy" > wrote in message >
> From the Spam website (www.Spam.com): > > SPAM Musubi > Much thanks to you. That sounds like it. |
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"Kevintsheehy" > wrote in message >
> From the Spam website (www.Spam.com): > > SPAM Musubi > Much thanks to you. That sounds like it. |
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