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Eggplants Shōjin

14/11/2022 By TQC 2 Comments

What are you thinking while you are cooking? Some of my friends play rock at full volume, others classical music… in fact, none of them listen to the music. It is the effect of concentration and also one of its benefits. Focusing on the step-by-step involved in cooking a dish produces a kind of absorption (knife cutting,  tasting , adjusting the fire). Cooking lovers say that it takes away their stress, it relaxes them, even that, for a while, it allows them to escape from the myriad of daily troubles. In fact, several prestigious medical centers already include cooking sessions as part of their therapies. Perhaps the most notable case is the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

Quite Zen, indeed. As we are going to recreate a traditional Shōjin Cuisine recipe, given the great interest in our previous post: Zucchini Shōjin. This time, instead of exploring the Zen principles that underlie Shōjin, we are going to delve into its technical details.

A cooking session can have a mental cleansing effect. Our attention goes to the details of the execution… not to the music… Today’s eggplant recipe is a great example, because its technique, quite simple on the other hand, requires attention to small details. Eggplant with Shiitakes is a traditional dish from the kitchen of Zen temples in Japan. Its essence: vegetable ingredients, very gentle cooking and enhancement of the flavors and textures of each ingredient.

To enjoy the benefits of cooking, we must focus our attention on five key moments:

Prepare the ingredients. Cut the green stems of the eggplants pods, cut the stemmed ends of the green beans, remove the shiitakes feet. Thoroughly wash beans and eggplants, wipe mushrooms with a damp cloth. Let vegetables drain.

Cut with precision. Cut eggplants, first in half, lengthwise and then in quarters. If they are long, cut each quarter in two at a 45 degree angle. All pieces should be a similar size and shape. Cut the green beans at an angle into 3-4 inch pieces. Cut each piece in half lengthwise.

Monitor cooking. Check when steam is ready to introduce the vegetables. After 7 minutes, check the texture with a skewer and leave or remove from heat. After 10 minutes check that mushrooms are well cooked and remove.

Adjust the flavors. Check that broth has thickened evenly. Taste and adjust salt. Check that all the elements in the dish are hot.

Plate and serve. Carefully place the aubergines on the serving dish. Distribute mushrooms and green beans. Glaze each piece with the cooking sauce. Decorate with sesame seeds.

This step-by-step is applicable to most recipes and simply illustrates the importance of attention when cooking. In the recipe below you can read the complete details of the elaboration.

The result is a light vegetable dish with their individual flavors intact. The creamy texture of eggplants contrasts with the al dente of green beans and the delicate bite of mushrooms. Barely seasoned, the mild sauce accompanying the dish rounds it off with sesame aromas and the pungency of tamari. It is an ideal dish to side with brown rice made like in our Venere Rice recipe.

In Zen painting it is essential to find the balance between the full (the painted part of the painting) and the empty (unpainted canvas). In Shōjin Cuisine we need a harmony of flavors and textures and to achieve it, while we cook we seek a balance between discipline and abandon. Enjoy!


Eggplants Shōjin
 
Print
Prep time
15 mins
Cook time
25 mins
Total time
40 mins
 
Author: TQC
Serves: 2
Ingredients
  • 2 medium sized eggplants (6-7 inch long)
  • 100 g flat green beans
  • 100 g fresh shiitake mushrooms
  • 1 tablespoon Tamari
  • 1 tablespoon panela sugar
  • 1 piece of dried kombu seaweed (2 x 2 inch)
  • 1 tablespoon sesame paste (tahini)
  • 400 ml mineral water
  • ½ teaspoon sea salt
  • Roasted sesame seeds
Instructions
  1. From cold water, without lid, cook the kombu seaweed in water and bring to a boil. Lower the heat to minimum and cook for 15 minutes. Remove the seaweed and reserve for another preparation. Add mushrooms and cook over medium heat until tender. Reserve the broth and mushrooms separately.
  2. Wash well and remove the green stems from eggplants and green beans. Cut eggplants lengthwise in half. Repeat the cut to obtain four quarters of each eggplant. Cut the green beans at an angle into 3-4 inch pieces. Cut each piece in half lengthwise.
  3. Place the vegetables in a steamer and cook for 10 minutes or until you can cleanly prick them with a skewer.
  4. In a flat pan mix the reserved broth with sugar, tamari and salt. Bring to a boil, add eggplants and mushrooms and cook over low heat for five minutes. Take out a laddle of cooking liquid and mix it with the tablespoon of tahini. When it is well dissolved, add it to the pan with gentle movements not to break the aubergines. Place green beans on top, turn off the heat and cover to keep it evenly warm.
  5. Plate, glaze vegetables with the cooking sauce and decorate with roasted sesame seeds.
Culinary Tips
The size of the eggplant pieces is very important (see the photo). If the eggplants are long or very large, cut them in half or make eight pieces of each.

Texture of each vegetable is key in this dish. Check the texture after 7-8 minutes and remove teggplants if they are nearly done. In the same way, leave the beans a little more than the approximate 10 minutes if they are still hard.
3.5.3251

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Gluten-free, Main dishes, Recipe Tagged With: Eggplant, Japanese cooking, mushrooms, Seaweed, Shōjin Cooking, Vegan, Zen Cooking

« Venere rice with peppers and sesame
King Oyster mushrooms with pine nuts »

Comments

  1. philnyc says

    21/11/2022 at 2:21 pm

    Thank you for this amazing shojin dish! It was a truly meditative pleasure to prepare; and the sesame seeds and broth combined perfectly with the eggplant and string beans to create tastes that set the stage for a moment of hishiryo. Looking forward to the next contemplative and quotidian delicacy!

    Reply
    • Javi says

      21/11/2022 at 2:51 pm

      Dear Phil, Many, many thanks for your sound comment. The original name of this dish is Nasu Rikyo-ni. I imagine you will be able to translate it better than me. Oh, my poor Japanese…
      I am so happy you enjoyed cooking it. This was the idea of this post. Just to encourage readers to get their knives ready and move to a culinary action!

      Cheers!

      Reply

Leave a Reply to JaviCancel reply

Bi Disc, Liangzhu culture 3300BC-2200BC. The British Museum

Zen Cooking

Zen cooking is the cuisine of Zen Buddhist temples. The best known are the cuisine of the temples of Japan, called Shōjin ryōri (精進 料理) and that of the temples of South Korea or Sawon Eumsig (사원 음식). Zen cooking is part of the temple's daily ritual and its dishes, ingredients and preparation techniques reflect the principles of Buddhism. Work in the temples kitchens revolves around four axes:
Clarity
Fresh ingredients, they are usually obtained from the temple gardens. Without treatments or industrial processing. Natural seasonings, fresh herbs and spices, dried or fermented at the temple. Simple techniques (Steaming, sautéing, boiling) that enhance the natural flavors of the vegetables. Order and cleanliness in the kitchen, in the presentation of the dishes and in the place where you eat.
Clarity is a part of the meal ritual. A glowing meal, with fresh ingredients and prepared with detail.
Flexibility
The kitchen adapts to day-to-day conditions. To what the pantry has, to the season of the year, to the needs of the people who are going to eat. Flexibility is a discipline to maintain the harmony of a meal in any circumstance.
Natural harmony
The Buddhist principle of respect for nature is reflected in the kitchen. It is a vegetarian diet, made with fresh seasonal products  and zero waste. Cooking becomes a meditative practice while preparing meals around the characteristics of the ingredients, their combinations and the cooking techniques used.
Just enough
Just enough means the balance in the amounts, in the condiments and in the recipes. Neither too much nor too little. The name of the traditional Korean temple bowl called balwoo translates as a bowl that holds what is needed.
The best-known works of Zen Cuisine are by Korean Buddhist nun Jeong Kwan thanks to her appearance in the Netflix series Chef's Table and by  Japanese monk Tanahashi Toshio. In both cases, perfectly contemporary dishes made with a serene and effective execution.
Zen cooking, far from being a closed proposal for Buddhist practitioners is a source of inspiration for a joyful, meditative, healthy kitchen in harmony with nature.

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ArtichokesAvocadoBeansCarrotsCornFlexitarianMediterraneanmushroomsRawRiceSeafoodVeganvegetarianZen Cooking

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