Zōni Information & Zōni Links at HealthHaven.com
advertise
add site
services
publishers
database
health videos
Bookmark and Share

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 
about
toolbar
stats
live show
health store
more stuff
JOIN/LOGIN
Featured Results:
About Chicken Soup Chinese Medicine : Chicken Soup Team
About Chicken Soup Chinese Medicine : Chicken Soup Team
docmisha.com
 Meatless Thicken Soup - Meatless Thicken Soup - [TCM discovery Net]
Meatless Thicken Soup - Meatless Thicken Soup - [TCM discovery Net]
tcmdiscovery.com
 Chong-Cao Sparerib Soup - Chong-Cao Sparerib Soup - [TCM discovery Net]
Chong-Cao Sparerib Soup - Chong-Cao Sparerib Soup - [TCM discovery Net]
tcmblog.com
 Meatless Thicken Soup - Meatless Thicken Soup - [TCM discovery Net]
Meatless Thicken Soup - Meatless Thicken Soup - [TCM discovery Net]
tcmadvisory.com
 
Zōni
Eating grilled mochi from zōni.

Zōni (雑煮?), often with the honorific "o-" as o-zōni, is a Japanese soup containing mochi rice cakes. The dish is strongly associated with the Japanese New Year and its tradition of osechi ceremonial foods.

It is said that zōni finds its roots in samurai society cuisine. It is thought to be a meal that was cooked during field battles, boiled together with mochi, vegetables and dried foods, among other ingredients. It is also generally believed that this original meal, at first exclusive to samurai, eventually became a staple food of the common people. Zōni was first served as part of a full-course dinner (honzen ryōri), and thus is thought to have been a considerably important meal to samurai.

As for ways of cooking the soup, different regions in Japan sport many variations, but in most cases it is either a clear soup (sumashi-jiru) flavoured with dashi (stock usually made from flakes of dried bonito) and soy sauce, generally preferred in eastern parts of the country, or a miso soup generally preferred in the western parts.

As a rule of thumb, mochi is cut into a rectangle in eastern Japan, whereas in western Japan the mochi is usually round. In some areas sato-imo (taro) or tofu is used instead of mochi. This type of zōni is found on some islands or some mountain areas where rice is not grown to a large extent.

Common additions to the soup include chicken, fish or meatballs; leafy vegetables such as komatsuna or spinach; mitsuba (a Japanese herb similar to parsley); kamaboko such as naruto and carrot flakes for colour; and flakes of yuzu peel for its citrus fragrance. Regional specialties are often added. A sprinkle of seven-spice chili flakes (shichimi) is sometimes added at the table.

[edit] See also




Product Results (view all...)

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 



↑ top of page ↑about thumbshots