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Posted (edited)

Let me introduce a very useful wheat product peculiar to Niigata: Ku-ru-ma-fu (車麩). As the Chinese character 車 (wheel) suggests, this "fu" (麩) looks like a "wheel".

If you need an explanation of "fu" (or "o-fu"),

Fu 麩: dried bread-like pieces of wheat gluten

(From eijiro on the web)

Access the site:

http://www.rakuten.co.jp/ajituu/611887/627616/

Look at the 4th and 5th photos. This type, "cut fu", is what I usually buy because it is less expensive than the "whole" type.

This fu has various uses just like uchimame.

You can use it to make risotto, curry, stew, sukiyaki, oden, miso soup, salad, fries, etc., etc.

All the following sites are in Japanese only:

Kurumafu cutlet:

http://hirorocooking.com/recepie/1158-07-01/

Kurumafu egg soup:

http://www2.tomato.ne.jp/~koborij/cooking/recipes/J005.htm

Kurumafu piccata:

http://ptop.lomo.jp/page044.html

Kurumafu no tatsuta yaki:

http://hirorocooking.com/recepie/1088-05-01/

Sukiyaki and others: (Scroll down)

http://www.indus.jp/ippinkan/kago/index11.html

It is useful, isn't it?

Edited by Hiroyuki (log)
Posted

Fu is really a wonderful product and you have basically two kinds

焼き麩 yaki fu --this has been cooked and then dried, has a fairly long shelf life and comes in many shapes

生麩 nama fu --raw wheat gluten, this is fresh and should be used quickly, it is popular in soups and simmerd dishes

Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"

 

Posted

I know of temari fu, but I have never tasted it before.

I guess it's used as an ornament or decoration on a special day.

I found two sites that may interest you:

Temari fu used in school lunch on 3/3 (March 3), which is Doll Festical day:

http://www.nakahara-e.kashiwa.ed.jp/kyuu/15gatu/

Temari fu used on top of a Japanese confection, together with gold foil (2nd photo)

http://www.zenkaren.net/oshirase/shohin.html

Posted

Oh, yes. Helenjp has a point. Temari fu is often used in Kyo Ryori, cuisine peculiar to Kyoto.

On the other hand, kuruma fu, which I mentioned, is very practical. You can use it instead of meat. I would recommend it to vegetarians.

  • 11 months later...
Posted

fu and mizuna tamago-toji

gallery_6134_1053_23808.jpg

fu and mizuna cooked in dashi, soy, and mirin with two eggs poured on top and cooked just until set.

Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"

 

  • 1 year later...
Posted

A Japanese friend who knows I enjoy "unusual" foods :biggrin: picked me up a bag of chocolate covered fu on her summer trip home to Yamagata Prefecture.

gallery_6134_2590_9365.jpg

It wasn't half bad.

Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"

 

Posted (edited)
A Japanese friend who knows I enjoy "unusual" foods :biggrin:  picked me up a bag of chocolate covered fu on her summer trip home to Yamagata Prefecture.

It wasn't half bad.

so is it chocolate-coated or chocolate-flavoured fu? i'm trying to imagine how it would taste... :blink:

edit to add: oh never mind, sorry. i didn't read well enough... :unsure:

Edited by gus_tatory (log)

"The cure for anything is salt water: sweat, tears, or the ocean."

--Isak Dinesen

Posted

It was just chocolate coated. It wasn't half bad sort of like any puffed grain (ie rice) product that was covered in milk chocolate.

Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"

 

Posted

Talking of fu, don't forget about fu-gashi, one of the dagashi that make you nostalgic for the 30s of Showa :biggrin: .

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