Mushroom Miso Soup

Published March 22, 2016

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Total Time
1 hour
Rating
4(712)
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This miso-enriched brothy soup is pleasing on many levels. You get complex flavor with minimal effort, especially if you make the dashi in advance. All the little garnishes are optional.

Featured in: Miso Soup Delivers Deep Weeknight Flavor

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Ingredients

Yield:2 large servings

FOR THE DASHI

  • 1 piece of kombu, about 6 inches square

  • 3 large dried shiitake mushrooms, crumbled

  • 3 teaspoons light soy sauce

  • 2 teaspoons mirin

  • 2 tablespoons sake

  • 2 teaspoons sugar

  • Salt to taste

FOR THE SOUP

  • 3 ounces fresh shiitake mushroom caps, thinly sliced, about 2 cups

  • 3 ounces King oyster mushrooms, thinly sliced

  • 2 teaspoons sesame oil

  • 2 teaspoons light soy sauce

  • ½ teaspoon grated garlic

  • 1 teaspoon grated ginger

  • Salt and pepper

  • 3 tablespoons white or red miso

  • 6 ounces silken tofu, at room temperature

FOR GARNISH (OPTIONAL)

  • Enoki mushroom tips

  • 2 tablespoons slivered scallions

  • 4 shiso leaves, slivered

  • Sunflower sprouts

  • 2 tablespoons slivered toasted nori

  • Pinch of crushed red pepper

  • Toasted sesame seeds

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Make the dashi: Put kombu, dried shiitakes, soy sauce, mirin, sake and sugar in a large soup pot. Add 6 cups cold water. Place over medium heat, allow the liquid to barely reach a boil, then reduce heat to low and let cook at a very slow simmer for about 30 minutes. Skim foam as necessary. Let cool to room temperature. Strain through a fine-mesh sieve and add salt to taste. (Dashi may be prepared up to 2 days in advance.)

  2. Step 2

    Put the sliced mushrooms in a bowl and drizzle with sesame oil and soy sauce. Add garlic and ginger and season with salt and pepper. Toss and let marinate for 10 minutes.

  3. Step 3

    Put dashi in a large soup pot over medium-high heat and bring to a simmer. Add mushroom mixture and cook gently for about 5 minutes, until the mushrooms are just tender.

  4. Step 4

    Remove ½ cup hot broth from pot and place in a small bowl. Stir in miso to dilute, then return miso-broth mixture to the pot. Taste and adjust seasoning. Once the miso has been added, do not let the soup boil.

  5. Step 5

    To serve, cut the tofu in half and place a 3-ounce chunk in each of two large bowls. Ladle 2 cups of hot soup over the tofu. Sprinkle with enoki mushroom tips, scallions, shiso, sunflower sprouts, nori, red pepper and toasted sesame seeds as desired.

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Ratings

4 out of 5
712 user ratings
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Comments

Don't forget the wonderful products at South River Miso. Their site shows many varieties plus recipes. They state: "We have been making hand crafted, wood fired, certified organic miso for over thirty years according to a centuries-old, Japanese farmhouse tradition." I have no connection at all with this company except as a satisfied customer. I've never even been to their place, which to judge from the slideshow is lovely; I order online and have jars sent to me by UPS.

There's quite a salt hit in miso (as much as 800mg in half a Tablespoon) so if you're watching your salt intake consider searching out a low-salt miso, like South River Sweet White, which only has about 175mg per half-Tbsp.

I thought this was delicious -- very flavorful. But honestly, I could have used any kind of mushroom and it still would have been delicious, rather than dropping $12 at the farmer's market for shiitake and King Oyster mushrooms. The broth was so flavorful that the individual mushroom flavors weren't really discernible. That being said, it would also be fantastic with any kind of protein like chicken added, rather than tofu. Will definitely make again with baby bellas & shiitake

We are vegetarian and this is our favorite miso soup broth, bar none. For a main entree, we add fresh ramen or veggie dumplings, and whatever vegetables we have on hand: broccolini, spinach, cabbage, mustard greens, etc. Kimchee or shichimi togarashi spice adds a kick. If you’re on the West Coast, check out JorinJi miso products. So good.

South River Miso is the BEST. The owners studied in Japan to make miso. It’s like no other and it is NOT a salt bomb. Plus, Miso does NOT raise your blood pressure. Science.

Make sure broth is hot before adding miso

Sounds great. I'll make mine sans the sugar.

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