Friday, February 08, 2008

Vegetarian Sushi

I am in love with making Sushi!

I'm obsessed with it. I've been scouring the internet for tips and tricks. I stopped at the Asian Food Market and grabbed a sushi rolling mat to increase productivity - which set me back a cool 99 cents! I can now chuck my sacraficed bamboo placemat which is pretty much ruined anyway, since I was pushing it past it's regular job of sitting pretty on my table.

It's funny, because although I wince at the thought of eating fish, no matter how I try to tell myself how good it should be - raw fish (particularly red snapper and tuna) is quite tasty. There's no "fishiness" - or there shouldn't be if it's fresh - and I find the texture to be quite similar to the rice in the sushi roll. Plus, if eaten with a dab of wasabi, dipped in soy sauce and chased with a piece of pickled ginger you can barely taste anything else!

I'm not brave enough to try my hand at working with the raw sea animals - but I have been playing around with the colors of the rainbow via the veggie briggade. Peppers in every single hew, carrots, sprouts, avocado, cucumbers, pickles, zuchinni and squash.

VEGETARIAN BROWN RICE SUSHI

2 sheets of Nori (found in Asian Food Markets)
1 carrot, peeled and cut into long, thin strips
1/2 cucumber, seeded and cut into long, thin strips (Do not peel!)
1/2 red bell pepper, cut into long, thin strips
1/2 a ripe avocado, removed from outer skin and cut into strips
1/4 cup mung bean sprouts
wasabi paste
pickled ginger

For Rice:
2 1/4 cups of water
1 cup brown rice
1 tbsp soy sauce
2 tbsp rice wine vinegar

Bring water to a boil in a saucepan. Add rice and soy sauce. Cover with a lid and let rice steam for 40-45 minutes or until done. Remove from heat and transfer to a bowl with a large surface area for cooling. Sprinkle with rice wine vinegar and gentle stir rice to coat. Let stand 20 minutes.

Meanwhile prepare all vegetables.

Lay out your sushi rolling mat onto a clean cutting board or other flat surface, so the slats are perpendicular to your body. Lay a piece of nori on the mat, shiny side down. Using damp fingers, spread a layer of rice over nori, covering the nori almost entirely - leaving a 1 inch strip at the top of the nori, furthest from you. (Doing this will help to seal the roll.)

Spread a very thin bead of wasabi paste in a single line along the edge nearest to you. Be careful with the wasabi, because if you use too much, you will blow yourself and your dinner mates out of the water! Arrange vegetables strips. Using your thumbs, gently begin to roll up the mat, squeezing gently to adhere the nori to itself. Chill roll for 10 minutes or so, then cut into pieces with a very sharp knife.



I served my sushi alongside some pork and vegetable pot stickers.

Now, some may think that brown rice was a strange choice...but I wanted to up the nutrician level and brown rice certainly did the trick. However, if I didn't tell you, you'd probably never know...it still had the same consistancy as traditional sushi (or sticky) rice, but with a slight nutty flavor.



I'm now thinking of ways to create a little sushi dessert roll. (Hummmm.....YUM!)

7 comments:

The Vaters said...

Oooo, I want some soooooo bad! Great job!

Anonymous said...

Looks like I'll have to roll some of my own today after seeing that.
A vegetarian variation I love that's a little out of the norm is using brown rice, almond butter, broccoli, carrots and avocado.
The almond butter makes this roll simply amazing.

Anonymous said...

Appalled. This is not sushi.

Definition of sushi:
cold boiled rice moistened with rice vinegar, usually shaped into bite-size pieces and topped with raw seafood (nigiri-zushi) or formed into a long seaweed-wrapped roll, often around strips of vegetable or raw fish, and sliced into bite-size pieces (maki-zushi).

It's all about the rice cooked with vinegar (sushi-meshi).

Don't call this sushi.

Nyteflame said...

Quote "cold boiled rice moistened with rice vinegar, ... formed into a long seaweed-wrapped roll, often around strips of vegetable or raw fish, and sliced into bite-size pieces"


Um, that's what she did. What are you getting so outraged over?

I do have to say that putting the wasabi IN the roll turns me off a little, but I would try it without, Im just not a wasabi fan.

Kat said...

Dear foodie hiding behind an anonymous facade...I'm so sorry that you are appalled by my "definition" of sushi. I realize that my recipe and technique is not traditional - nor did I claim it to be.

This is a blog written by a home cook...not a professional. Sometimes I like to copy traditional dishes and make them easier for the home cook who wants to branch out into different areas.

I encourage you to come back and post under your real user name.

Travel West Aus said...

Desert sushi:

-Edible rice paper (like the stuff that little pictures on cupcakes is made of) in sheets
-Ice cream (or sweet creamed rice)
-Filling: chocolate, jelly, fruit, or tapioca squares etc.

Roll like normal sushi...

Voila! :)

Anonymous said...

I dont really understand how this is NOT sushi. This IS sushi, according to the anon