A warm and comforting recipe for a hearty stew made with pork, red miso paste, mushrooms and wild rice. Easily cooked in the Instant Pot and ready in under an hour!
Read MoreMiso Butter Roasted Shrimp
This Miso Butter Roasted Shrimp recipe is perfect for entertaining or for nights when you want a quick and easy meal. Perfect with crusty bread, a salad, and a perfectly delicious glass of Harken Chardonnay. Also perfect for using up miso from the back of your fridge! We both know it is there…give it some life!
Read MoreBrown Sugar Miso Ice Cream
If you love making ice cream, this is a great way to mix things up: Miso-Brown Sugar Ice Cream tastes like salted caramel and puts that tub of miso in the back of your fridge to good (and delicious) use!
Read MoreSavory Oatmeal with Miso Butter
Savory Oatmeal with miso butter and a perfect fried egg will turn your breakfast world upside down!
Read MoreMiso-Honey Glazed Chicken Wings
As my belly gets bigger, I am able to spend less time on my feet in the kitchen. Between my waddling from one counter to another and the belly bumping into things, I think it's safer for everyone if I just get out of the way. Still, I try to get in he kitchen here and there to make simple things like smoothies or oatmeal for breakfast. I have also been able to muster the strength to make these miso-honey glazed chicken wings a couple of times, much to my husband's delight. They are sticky, sweet, salty and oh-so-easy. And did I mention they are baked? Well, they are. And that makes them even better and healthier and more appealing.
Here's what happens: the wings get brown and crispy skin thanks to a 475 degree oven before being brushed with a flavor explosion of miso, honey and a touch of rice vinegar. They are baked for a few more minutes to make the glaze extra sticky before one last coating is brushed on before serving. Done and done.
I've mentioned in previous posts that I'm not much of a football fan unless there is delicious food involved. These wings are helpful for getting anyone and everyone through a game. They are also delicious as an appetizer while playing a fierce game of Chutes & Ladders with a 3 year old.
Now, if I could devise a plan to eat this entire plate of wings and suffer no pregnancy-heartburn-side-dish-of-tums, I'd really be winning at life.
NOTES:
As you can see, I did not break these wings down. You don’t have to! If you do want to, the recipe still works as written, so you do you! If you do break them down, save the wing tips in a freezer bag to use in homemade stock if you feel so inclined.
You can totally grill these. Just grill instead of putting them in the oven!
If you are struggling to get your miso paste to whisk into the honey and rice vinegar smoothly, pop the miso and the honey in the microwave for 10-15 seconds to soften it all up a bit. DO NOT add water- the glaze won’t be as sticky!
Miso-Honey Glazed Chicken Wings
Makes 6-8 servings
3 pounds chicken wings
2 teaspoons kosher salt
2 tablespoons miso paste (anything you have is fine- I used shiro)
3 tablespoons honey
1 1/2 teaspoons rice vinegar
Preheat the oven to 475˚F. Pat the chicken wings dry with paper towels and arrange them on two large, parchment-lined baking sheets. Brush them with some canola or avocado oil and season with salt.
Bake for 15 minutes or until the skin is golden brown and crisp. Meanwhile, whisk the miso paste, honey and rice vinegar together in a bowl.
Remove the wings from the oven, toss them in a large bowl with the glaze. Turn on the broiler so it can heat while you place the wings back on the baking sheets. This time, broil them for 3-5 minutes, turning occasionally. It is ok if the skin gets dark brown in places- that’s where you’ll get the most flavor.
Serve as is immediately, or sprinkle with some mint leaves or sesame seeds to a little color and texture.
Thanksgiving Stuffing with Miso Vegetables
It is snowing and freezing cold and TOTALLY AWESOME in Denver right now. I'm so happy I want to skip and hop around the house like a very small child but my gigantic pregnant belly simply won't allow it. Instead, I'm taking as much time as possible to soak it all in since there's no telling when we will get snowy weather like this again. Christmas will probably be 60 degrees and sunny and I'll be crying in my hot chocolate wishing my tears would turn into snowflakes. I know. I'm crazy. I'm OK with this and clearly I don't mind spreading the news. I will say that it is much easier to test and photograph holiday recipes with this kind of weather going on outside my window. Making this Thanksgiving Stuffing with Miso Vegetables filled the house with warmth and delicious smells. I could have sworn there would be a beautifully golden turkey in the oven when I opened the door...
We may not always think of Japanese food in the realm of comfort foods like stuffing, but there are cooking techniques that work beautifully to enhance the already addicting flavors found in many of the dishes we serve on Thanksgiving. Here, I've taken the vegetables and sauteed them until they just begin to soften. Then, I added some miso paste, a splash of cooking sake and a bit of soy sauce, allowing everything to simmer until the vegetables are nicely glazed with a beautiful sauce. I was worried that the sourdough bread I'd chosen would be too overpowering for the vegetables but they were a perfect match. A few finely diced green apples and some crunchy, earthy walnuts and this dish was a done deal. Perfect for a little something different (but not too different) for your Thanksgiving spread.
The only thing missing was a drizzle of turkey gravy and, well, turkey.
I love bringing little bits of our life in Tokyo into the traditions that make life in the U.S. so wonderful. I think that's one of the most wonderful things about food. It helps us bring all of our 'homes' with us no matter where we are. For that, I am thankful.
Thanksgiving Stuffing with Miso Vegetables
Makes 12 servings
- 24 oz sourdough bread loaf, cut into 1/2 inch cubes
- 2 tablespoons butter
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 4 large carrots, diced
- 4 celery stalks, diced
- 1 large onion, diced
- 4 granny smith apples, peel on, diced
- 1 cup walnut halves, roughly chopped
- 1/4 cup shiro or awase miso paste
- 1/3 cup cooking sake
- 1/4 cup soy sauce
- salt and pepper to taste
- 2 cups low sodium chicken broth
- Rosemary for garnish
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.
Spread the bread cubes on two large, rimmed baking sheets and bake until just dry but not golden brown, about 8 minutes. Remove the bread from the oven and set aside to cool.
In a large sautée pan, melt the butter with the olive oil over medium-high heat. Add the carrots, celery and onion and cook until just beginning to soften, about 4 minutes. Add the miso paste, sake and soy sauce to the pan and stir until the miso paste has completely broken down and the liquid in the pan is smooth. Reduce the heat to medium/medium-low and simmer gently until the vegetables are soft and glazed. Stir occasionally to prevent burning.
In a large bowl (or two) combine the bread with the vegetables. Add the apples and walnuts and toss to combine. Add the chicken broth and toss to make sure all of the bread has come into contact with the broth.
Transfer the stuffing to 2 9x13 inch baking dishes that have been sprayed well with cooking spray.
Bake for 35-40 minutes or until there is a nice golden topping on the stuffing.
Remove from the oven, garnish with rosemary, and serve.