Banana Yoshimoto’s menu
Kobachi — the small tangy side dish of ichijū-sansai

Seasonal Vegetables in Agar-Agar and Mild Vinegar (Sunomono)

PreservingReconstruction🍋 🧂facile45 min

Thin slices of cucumber and wakame marinated in lightly sweetened rice vinegar, sometimes perked up with ginger. Fresh, crunchy, refreshing — the tangy note that balances the whole meal.

Kobachi — the small tangy side dish of ichijū-sansai

Thin slices of cucumber and wakame marinated in lightly sweetened rice vinegar, sometimes perked up with ginger. Fresh, crunchy, refreshing — the tangy note that balances the whole meal.

When it's muggy in Tokyo, nothing revives me like that little tangy bowl straight from the fridge. I salt the cucumber, I squeeze the water out with my hands — that simple gesture calms me. The vinegar, barely sweetened, keeps the vegetables fresh for two or three days; I make a bowl in advance, and it waits for me, cool, like a little promise.
Banana Yoshimoto
Ingredients
  • Japanese cucumberone (crunch)
  • Wakamea pinch, rehydrated (seaweed)
  • Rice vinegara few spoonfuls (preservative acidity)
  • Sugar and salta touch (balance)
  • Gingera sliver (pungent freshness)
How it was made : Sunomono is part of the "su" (vinegar) dishes that have structured Japanese cuisine for centuries: rice vinegar played the dual role of seasoning and mild preservative, allowing vegetables to be kept cool for a few days before the age of refrigeration. It varied with the season: cucumber in summer, turnip or persimmon in autumn.
Sources : Shizuo Tsuji, Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art (1980)