How To Make The Best Ramen At Home With June

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- Can we just take a moment to appreciate how freakin' beautiful it is? It is perfectly tender, skin is so glossy. (upbeat music) Hi guys, welcome back to My Home Kitchen and today we are making some homemade Ramen from scratch. We're not making the noodles, but we're making everything else from scratch. The dashi which is a very gentle seafoody based broth, very light. Tare which is called the soul of ramen because it's basically a very flavored soy sauce. We're gonna be marinating and slow cooking some pork belly into that tare, so that it's extra, extra flavorful and a little bit fatty for that richness. We're gonna be making some marinated eggs, nitamago and it's gonna be so, so perfectly boiled. It's like that midway point between a soft boiled egg and a medium boiled egg, where the egg is just luscious. We're gonna be marinating that soft boiled, medium boiled egg in that tare sauce and it's gonna be flavor, on top of flavor, on top of flavor, and as if that weren't enough flavor for you, we're gonna be making a spicy chili oil that's totally optional, but if you like spice, it's not optional because it's one of the easiest homemade chili oils you can possibly ever make. Perfect condiment to the perfect bowl of ramen. Okay so let's talk ingredients for a sec. For the dashi, very simply you're gonna be needing some chicken broth, some bonito flakes, dry shiitake mushrooms, and kombu. These are all very traditionally Japanese ingredients to put into ramen. If you don't have any specific ingredient in this bunch, don't worry about it right now. Just carry forth with what you have. For the dashi, super simple, you're going to be bringing the chicken broth up to a simmer in a pot. Once it's up to a simmer, you're going to take it off the heat, let it cool for two minutes, and then you're gonna slide in the mushrooms and the kombu. Once the kombu and the mushrooms are in for about five minutes, we're going to slide in the bonito flakes. Steep for five additional minutes. We're staggering the flavors in this way so that all of these very pungent, aromatic ingredients don't leach too much flavor into the broth. We still want to keep it a very clean tasting broth even though it's flavorful, we just don't want it to be overly flavorful. There is such a thing as overly flavorful. Strain everything out and reserve all the solids so that we can use it in our later components for the ramen later. (water pouring) Okay so now we've made our dashi and we're just gonna set it aside and let it cool down. We're gonna set this aside. This is all of our strained out mushrooms, and bonito flakes, and kombu. And we're gonna move onto making our tare and our pork belly. My favorite part. No, actually I lied, my favorite part is the eggs. Stay tuned for the eggs. Tare has a lot of components in it because it's a very well seasoned soy sauce base. So we're gonna be using soy sauce, sake, kind of rice wine, mirin, which is kind of like a byproduct of sake making. It's more sugary, not as alcoholic, still packs a very fragrant flavor. That fragrance that comes from mirin and sake, you really can't beat. If you don't have those two things, you can definitely use sherry or any kind of fragrant alcohol, or just leave it out. You don't need it, just add a little bit more water to tone down the soy sauce's sodium content and substitute in a little bit more sugar. Go with a little more brown sugar, so that you get a more molassesy flavor or honey. Honey could be good too. We're going to blanche our pork belly right now. This recipe calls for one pound of pork belly, which is about this amount, but I brought more because I was greedy and I was like, "If I'm making ramen, I might as well make more anyway." So I'm just gonna go ahead and blanche all two pounds of pork belly that I have. So very quickly going to put the pork into the pot, and just fill it up with water. About six cups depending on your pot, depending on how much meat you're putting in. Just enough to cover, and then we're going to bring it up to a simmer and drain the water immediately. The point of this process is not to really cook the meat. We're not trying to cook the meat at all. We're just getting rid of some of the not so fresh, not so great tasting parts. I think we're ready to take this off the heat, drain it and give the meat a quick little rinse. I can see that all parts of the meat is visibly opaque. That's a good sign. No more redness, that means that it's been successfully blanched at least on the outside. So quickly turn that heat off, let's drain it. (upbeat music) Okay guys, we're gonna make our tare and chashu now. (stove clicking) Heat on medium, we're gonna go in with our soy sauce. I'm using low sodium soy sauce here because we have a lot of sodium going in. We got our cup and a quarter of mirin. Sake, or just more mirin if you don't have it. Then we have our water. Granulated sugar. Brown sugar, break it up a little bit. We got our ginger slices. We got our crushed garlic, and we got our nice green onions. And we're just gonna wait for that to come up to a simmer. Smells pretty potent. All right, once we have this simmer going, we're just gonna turn our heat to low, and we're gonna plop in our pork, and we're going to cover the pan or the pot, and we're going to let it go for about an hour and 20 minutes until the pork is completely tender. We're going to cook this meat as slowly and gently as possible so that the meat is going to stay tender and truly, truly, truly melt in your mouth good. Buttery, buttery pork belly goodness. Really a perfect a fit. So once the meat starts cooking, it will start shrinking a little bit. We'll just check back occasionally on its progress and we'll give them a little turn. Make sure that it's all cooking evenly. And yes, I don't have a huge kitchen so I store all of my pots and lids in my oven. That's where they live. Just make sure that this is the kind of simmering that you're getting, very low gentle simmer, nothing too viciously bubbly or anything like that. (lid clanging) All right, we are just at the halfway point here, actually it's maybe been about 35 minutes. I'm gonna check up on it. It smells so good right now, just filled with that delicious porky flavor. It looks so nice and tender right now. That skin is nice and glossy right now and it's just, I can already taste it. Just giving them a flip. You can see that one side has captured more sauce and it's a little bit darker in color than the other. We're just gonna go ahead and give them all a flip. Folks, the moment has arrived. It's been an hour and 25 minutes, I can smell it, I can feel it, I think we are ready for the unveiling of this, (snare rolling) chashu. (upbeat music) Can we just take a moment to appreciate how freakin' beautiful it is? It is perfectly tender, skin is so glossy. I just want to test the tenderness of it. I'm pretty sure it is super tender, but I have a cake tester, which word to the wise is not actually that great for testing cakes because you stick it in and because of this sleek metal tester, no crumbs actually ever really cling to it unless it's super, super underdone batter. But cake testers, fantastic for testing meat. We're just gonna stick it into our pork belly and see how tender it is, so. Oh man that slid in with no resistance whatsoever. Even the piece that's super lean and with bone attached, is sliding in like it's just pure butter. So I think we're ready to pull. We're going to remove the pork from the liquid when it's a little bit easier to handle, when it's not so hot. And then we're gonna reserve the liquid for our eggs and our ramen. And we're gonna reserve the pork and let it cool completely before we slice into it. And in the meantime, we're gonna make our nitamago which is basically a seasoned soft boiled egg. I like mine somewhere between soft and medium boiled, where it's like a little bit runny in the middle and the outside of the yolk is just barely set into this almost gel like texture. And we're rolling. Rolling at a boil. Gentle. We're gonna set that timer for 6 1/2. Just boiling some eggs, real exciting stuff here. Timer's going off, it's time. We turn off the heat, we shuffle on over to the sink. Now just let them sit in there for about five minutes before I start tapping them against each other to crack 'em. (water pouring) What I like to do is take two eggs and I just knock them against each other and the weaker one will break. This one. Well this egg is a true champion, but I'm still gonna break it anyway. And then once they're thoroughly cracked, I just cover them with cold water again and let 'em chill for about five to 10 minutes and then I'll peel them. Okay guys, so we are ready to do our final step for day one with peeling our eggs and taking our meat out of the tare solution and marinating our eggs in the tare solution, so first things first we're gonna peel the eggs. We're gonna drain the water and hopefully these will peel really, really well. Pretty smooth. Next up, we're just going to take out all the pork from the broth. Just be real gentle with your tongs because it is very, very tender meat right now. I'll probably put it in the fridge over night so that it gets completely cool for a completely clean slice. We're just gonna strain the liquid from all the solids. (liquid pouring) So we have the eggs in a bowl, we have our cooled tare, we are going to cover the eggs with the tare about two to 2 1/2 cups worth of it. And then we're going to take our kombu. This is from our dashi process earlier and we're just gonna use it as a cover to weigh down the eggs, like this. And then we're just gonna let this sit in the fridge of about four to 12 hours until they're marinated and they take on a soy saucy color on the outside. And then we're just gonna put everything else in the fridge and check back tomorrow to finish the entire bowl of ramen. (upbeat music) Hi guys, welcome back to day two of making our homemade ramen. I am so ready to eat this bowl of ramen. There is only one last component for us to make before we can assemble our bowl and that's the chili oil, the la-yu. It is basically a garlic confit, red pepper flake oil concoction that is going to be pretty divine, especially for those of you who like your spicy condiments, this is the ultimate spicy condiment you can make at home. Let's make some spicy chili oil. Grab a tiny pot, set it to low heat. We're gonna pour in our oil with our mountain of garlic. Just going to swish the garlic around with the oil to make sure that everything is nicely coated together. It's starting to simmer and once you see that kind of simmering action happening, we wanna just keep a close eye on it. We wanna keep the heat as low as possible. It's a very zen process. There's some golden bits coming into play now. (timer beeping) There you go. Oh yeah. I just took it off the heat, no flames. It's still gonna cook. Swirl it and let it sit for two minutes until the oil is nice and red. We want it completely saturated with both that flavor and that color. The carry over heat level is going to help all the aromas and the spiciness of the chili flakes release into the oil. All right, two minutes have passed and you can see that the oil is very red. That nice orangy golden color. We're ready for our sesame seeds to go in. And we're just gonna let it cool on its own until it's ready to be used. Once it's completely cool, you can store this in a jar for up to two weeks. Final stretch guys, final stretch. So we have the tare which is now fully up to boil. I will turn that off. We have the dashi which is our broth foundation. We're gonna have our noodles. We have our fantastic chili oil, look at that color. My goodness. And we have our marinated eggs, marinated eggs, let me try not to spill. And we have our fantastic, fatty pieces of pork belly that we're gonna slice up. Maybe char it a little bit, I don't know. You feel up to it? I feel up to it. Any day with a fire is a great day in my book, so (hands rubbing) time to eat. Okie doke, my noodles are in, we're just gonna let them go for about a minute and a half to two minutes, until they feel nicely buoyant and al dente. Okay it's been about two minutes, I'm about to fish the noodles out. I'm setting up a strainer situation here so that we can sling all the noodles out from the water so that they don't get water logged. There we go. And then I'm just gonna lift the colander and slam it back down with the noodles inside and get all the water out. This is fun (giggling). Okay let's assemble our noodles. (torch blasting) We have our ramen. It took two days, but it is beautiful. I hope you agree that this is delicious. If you've made it, let me know down below how you liked it. I'm really hungry, I haven't eaten all day, so I'm excited to dig into this. I think it's gonna be freakin' delicious. I know it's gonna be freakin' delicious. Look at that fatty pork, nicely charred. Look at this nicely soft medium boiled egg with that jelly center of a yolk. Nice springy noodles with some nice fragrant shiitake mushrooms for extra chew and extra meatiness, and our spicy, spicy chili oil with that delicious garlic aroma all infused inside it. And our dashi broth. (liquid slurping) Oh my god. Mm. (liquid slurping) I'm just gonna eat my dinner, my lunner, my lunch dinner here. (liquid slurping) (upbeat music)
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Channel: Delish
Views: 541,534
Rating: 4.9477925 out of 5
Keywords: kitchen lessons, delish, food, recipes, how to, how - to, food hacks, cooking, cook, delish recipe, by june, ramen, soup, homemade, from scratch, authentic, homemade ramen, how to make ramen, how to make ramen broth, ramen broth, broth, spicy ramen, best ramen, real ramen, dashi, tare, nitamago
Id: UNsyrwLwkvo
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 20min 21sec (1221 seconds)
Published: Thu Apr 02 2020
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