Andrea Nguyen
Author & Teacher
Send a messageMy Books
One of Cooking Light's 2010
Favorite Cookbooks!
Asian Dumplings
(Ten Speed Press, 2009)
Reviews & Press Release
Enhanced e-book with how-to videos now available!
Into the Vietnamese Kitchen
(Ten Speed Press, 2006)
Reviews & Press Release
E-book release: 5/11/2011
Recent PostsJapanese Sweet Rice Dumplings with Brown Sugar Syrup Recipe (Shiratama Dango)Homemade Kinako Toasted Soy FlourInstant Feel Good Foods: Deviled Eggs and Kewpie MayonnaiseEnhanced Asian Dumplings eBook and New Book Info!Dashi Carnitas Tacos Recipe2011 Japan Disaster: Elizabeth Andoh’s Experience & RequestsMail Call: Western Ways with Asian Food? Refrigerator Gold: Leftovers Panfried NoodlesReader Contribution: A Vietnamese Waif’s First Mardi Gras Pho Secret Ingredients: Dried Earthworms (Sa Sung)Awards + Praise
James Beard Foundation
Award Finalist
2007 Best Asian Cookbook
IACP Awards Finalist
2010 Best Single Subject Cookbook
2007 Best First Book
2007 Best Int'l Cookbook
National Public Radio
Best 10 Cookbooks of 2009
Cooking Light Magazine
Oct. 2009 "Editors' Dozen" Top Picks
2010 Editors' Favorite Cookbooks
CHOW.com
Winter 2009 Gift Guide
Handy InfoAsian IngredientsAsian MarketsBasic Vietnamese KitchenBook Reviews + moreCooking Tips and ToolsEssentials: Fish SauceEssentials: NoodlesEssentials: Pho Noodle SoupEssentials: RiceEssentials: Rice PaperGardeningHow to Find Asian Markets & IngredientsMama SaysTet New Year CelebrationTravel« Instant Feel Good Foods: Deviled Eggs and Kewpie Mayonnaise |Main| Japanese Sweet Rice Dumplings with Brown Sugar Syrup Recipe (Shiratama Dango) »
March 28, 2011Homemade Kinako Toasted Soy Flour
Powdery toasted soy flour imparts a wonderful tan color and nutty finish to foods. Called kinako, it’s a Japanese ingredient that’s used in Taiwanese kitchens too. Surprisingly, toasted soy flour is also entering high end kitchens in China. When I traveled to Chengdu last year, uber Sichuan Chef Yu Bo made his own from roasting and grinding dried soy beans. He used the powder to finish a dessert preparation in his tour de force tasting menu at Yu’s Family Kitchen.
I needed toasted soy flour today for an afternoon snack of Japanese sweet rice dumplings (shiratama dango). Unfortunately, I wasn’t near a Japanese or well-stocked Chinese market! I remembered Yu Bo telling me that he simply made his own.
I thought of making kinako myself but read online that grinding the beans had to be done slowly and carefully. Then I realized that in the United States, many health food stores carry soy flour. You can buy small quantities for next to nothing in the bulk section. The grinding had been done for me so all I needed to do was toast the flour! Bingo.
The first time out, I burnt the flour as I tried toasting too much in a skillet. It also went flying when I went to stir it. The second time, I used a small saucepan to minimize the mess, but my heat was too high at medium and I didn’t stir frequently enough. The stuff toasted unevenly. The third try was the charm.Here’s how to make your own toasted soy flour:
In a 1-quart saucepan, put about 3 tablespoons of soy flour. Heat it over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally for 1 minute. As the pan and flour heat up, you have to stir it more often and then constantly. Ramp up your stirring after the first minute and then keep stirring for about 5 minutes more, until very fragrant. The soy flour will give off a funny toasty, popcorn-like smell that verges on seeming burnt. Near the end, pick up the saucepan and stir the flour to control the toasting. The flour will darken quickly at this stage so monitor it carefully. You want a tan color like café au lait and delicate nutty flavor. Err on the lighter side as you can always toast it some more but you cannot go backwards.Transfer the toasted soy flour to a small bowl and let it cool completely before using.How does the homemade compare to storebought? Well, it's very good and the major difference is that the soy flour may not be as thoroughly toasted as the commercially produced product. On the other hand, if you need just a little, you can get by with making kinako on the fly!
Do you use kinako? Or have you made kinako yourself? What have your experiences been like?
¦ ? ¦
Posted in Asian Ingredients, Recipes: All, Recipes: Basic Sauces, Stocks and Garnishes, Recipes: Fast and Easy, Recipes: Gluten-Free , Recipes: Vegan, Recipes: Vegetarian | PermalinkReblog (0) | | Digg This | | Comments
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.
Verify your Comment Previewing your CommentPosted by: |This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.
Your comment could not be posted. Error type: Your comment has been posted. Post another comment The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.
Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.
Post a comment Comment below or sign in with TypePad Facebook Twitter and more... You are currently signed in as (nobody). Sign Out (URLs automatically linked.)
Your Information
(Name and email address are required. Email address will not be displayed with the comment.)
Name is required to post a comment
Please enter a valid email address
Invalid URL
Be Connected Get news via RSS or emailGet updates in Facebook
Follow me on Twitter
Search VWK
Share Shots#flickr_badge_source_txt {padding:0; font: 11px Arial, Helvetica, Sans serif; color:#666666;}#flickr_badge_icon {display:block !important; margin:0 !important; border: 1px solid rgb(0, 0, 0) !important;}#flickr_icon_td {padding:0 5px 0 0 !important;}.flickr_badge_image {text-align:center !important;}.flickr_badge_image img {border: 0px solid black !important;}#flickr_badge_uber_wrapper {width:150px;}#flickr_www {display:block; text-align:center; padding:0 10px 0 10px !important; font: 11px Arial, Helvetica, Sans serif !important; color:#3993ff !important;}#flickr_badge_uber_wrapper a:hover,#flickr_badge_uber_wrapper a:link,#flickr_badge_uber_wrapper a:active,#flickr_badge_uber_wrapper a:visited {text-decoration:none !important; background:inherit !important;color:#3993ff;}#flickr_badge_wrapper {background-color:#ffffff;border: solid 1px #000000}#flickr_badge_source {padding:0 !important; font: 11px Arial, Helvetica, Sans serif !important; color:#666666 !important;}www.flickr.comMore in Viet World Kitchen pool. Add yours!RecipesAppetizer and Snack RecipesBanh (Crepes, dumplings, cakes, bread) RecipesBanh Mi Sandwich RecipesBasic Sauces, Stocks and Garnishes RecipesChile Sauce RecipesClaypot (Kho) RecipesDeep-Fried RecipesDessert and Sweets RecipesDipping Sauces RecipesDrink and Beverage RecipesGluten-Free RecipesGrilled RecipesMain Course RecipesMeat RecipesNoodles RecipesOne-Dish Meals RecipesPho RecipesPoultry and Egg RecipesRice RecipesSalad RecipesSeafood RecipesSoup RecipesStir-Fry RecipesStreet Food RecipesVegan RecipesVegetable Sides and Pickles RecipesVegetarian Recipes Vietnamese RecipesNon-Vietnamese RecipesViet World Kitchen | Copyright 2002-2011 by Andrea Nguyen | Privacy Policy document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + (document.location.protocol == "https:" ? "https://sb" : "http://b") + ".scorecardresearch.com/beacon.js'%3E%3C/script%3E"));COMSCORE.beacon({ c1: 2, c2: "6035669", c3: "", c4: "http://www.vietworldkitchen.com/blog/2011/03/homemade-kinako-toasted-soy-flour.html", c5: "", c6: "", c15: ""});
No comments:
Post a Comment