Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto with Cured Egg Yolks

Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto

I hate to start this way, but I have a small confession to make. I broke a very important miso-related rule in the making of this Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto. I’m sorry. But not really sorry because this risotto was freaking delicious. And it also made delicious arancini too. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

Placing a yolk in the salt and sugar mixture.
Cured egg yolks

The rule I broke is one held in high esteem by health nuts and miso soup purists alike. Thou shalt not cook miso. Apparently, you should only add the miso to dashi (a Japanese stock made from kombu and katsuobushi) after it has cooled slightly. This technique preserves the good-for-you active cultures found in miso paste as well as the flavor.

Taking the yolks out of the salt and sugar after 48 hours

Well, I definitely didn’t do that. I held true to traditional risotto recipes and left my broth (in this case, miso soup) simmering as I slowly added it to my rice. Basically, I left my miso paste simmering in hot dashi for roughly 20 minutes. Yeah, those cultures were not just dead, they were dead, dead.

Dried wild mushrooms soaking

Anyway, if you care more about your health than I clearly do, you may not want to leave your miso soup simmering? But then again, the miso is still going into a hot risotto pot, so it’s hard to find a happy ending for those poor cultures… BUT I’m happy to report the flavor of the miso did not seem to be altered by its prolonged exposure to heat. Although, I am by no means a miso specialist (sommelier?). Anyway, that’s the skinny on my most recent foodie sin, we now return to our regularly scheduled programming. Thank you for your patience.

Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto

I know, it may seem like I’m overreaching for that quirky foodie factor. But I did genuinely want to make this Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto to find out if A. it would work and B. if it would taste good. The answer to both was yes, so apparently Italian and Japanese food get along famously, who knew? And the risotto was not the only place the two cuisines complemented each other perfectly.

Shaving egg yolks over the Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto

You may have noticed the sunny, yellow shavings scattered atop the risotto; those are cured egg yolk shavings. Cure egg yolks are maybe the best thing that has ever happened to me… culinarily speaking, of course. Basically you pack egg yolks in salt and sugar and let them be for 48 hours before unearthing them. There’s room for other flavorings as well. I added porcini powder (a member of the Italian food camp) and perilla (a member from the Japanese food camp), a herb I discovered, and fell in love with while trying to become half-way decent at cooking Korean food. As with the risotto, the Italian and Asian ingredients worked very well together.

Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto

I feel I should warn you, the Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto takes a while to pull together – what with curing the egg yolks for two days – but it is worth the wait.

Serve it with sake and try not to have your mind blown.

Enjoy!

Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto

Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto

Miso soup and risotto collide in this lush and creamy Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto topped with buttery curls of cured egg yolk.
Prep Time 35 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 30 minutes
curing time 2 days
Course Main Course
Cuisine Italian, Japanese
Servings 4

Ingredients
  

Cured Egg Yolks

  • 4 large egg yolks
  • 1 ¾ cups kosher salt
  • 1 ¼ cups granulated sugar
  • 3 tbsp porcini mushroom powder see note

Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto

  • 30g (1 oz) pack dried wild mushrooms
  • 1 cup luke warm water
  • 5 cups instant dashi
  • 3 tbsp white (Shiro) miso paste
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 2 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 ½ cups aborio rice
  • ½ cup sake

Instructions
 

For the Cured Egg Yolks

  • Place salt, sugar, and porcini powder in a bowl and whisk to combine.
  • Pour half of the salt, sugar mixture into a small casserole dish in an even layer. Using the back of a tablespoon, make four yolk-size indents in the salt, sugar mixture. Gently place yolks in the indents and carefully cover them with the remaining salt, sugar mixture. Mark the location of each egg yolk with a peppercorn and wrap the casserole dish loosely with plastic wrap. Leave the egg yolks in the fridge for 48 hours.
  • When the 48 hours is up, carefully remove the egg yolks from the salt, sugar mixture and place them on a cooling rack. Pop the egg yolks in a 150 F oven for an hour and a half. Place finished egg yolks in a jar and refrigerate until ready to use. Cured egg yolks will keep for up to a month.

For the Wild Mushroom Miso Risotto

  • Place dried mushrooms in a medium-sized mixing bowl. Add the warm water and leave the mushrooms to reconstitute for at least 20 minutes or for up to an hour. Once the hour is up, drain the mushrooms and reserve the liquid.
  • Prepare the dashi according to the package's instructions. Reduce dashi to a simmer and stir in the reserved mushroom water and miso paste. Leave to simmer.
  • In a dutch oven, heat olive oil over medium heat. Add garlic and saute until fragrant. Add rice and reconstituted mushrooms to the pot and stir until the rice begins to crackle.
  • While stirring constantly, add sake, and cook until there is almost no moisture left. Add just enough miso soup to the rice to barely cover it. Cook, stirring constantly until the soup has almost disappeared. From here, add a ladle or two of the miso soup to the rice at a time, until the soup is gone and rice is smooth and creamy with a slight bite. Remove from heat.
  • Garnish the risotto with sesame seeds and grated cured egg yolk. Serve immediately.

Notes

**To make mushroom powder, simply grind up a pack of dried porcini mushrooms in a food processor or coffee grinder.
Keyword arborio rice, miso, risotto, wild mushrooms

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