Tuna poke bowl | in my Red Kitchen #tuna #raw #fish #sushi #pokebowl #tunapokebowl

Tuna poke bowl with pickled shiitakes

Tuna poke bowl | in my Red Kitchen #tuna #raw #fish #sushi #pokebowl #tunapokebowl

– Click here for this recipe in Dutch -> Poke bowl met tonijn

Lately I am trying hard to catch up on all the raw fish I couldn’t eat for nine months. I eat pounds of raw fish weekly, in the form of sushi but preferably in the form of a poke bowl.

Poke is pronounced as Poh-kee, and it’s a Hawaiian raw fish salad. Add some rice and vegetables and you have a poke bowl, or better to say: dinner! Quite healthy (if you’re using more vegetables than rice of course) and also extremely tasty. So of course this is my new favorite!

During my pregnancy all those poke bars popped up in Los Angeles. That was so mean! I was craving raw fish so badly and that was just something that I couldn’t eat. After giving birth I therefore had a poke bowl delivered as soon as possible. And I also had it two days in a row 😉

Tuna poke bowl | in my Red Kitchen #tuna #raw #fish #sushi #pokebowl #tunapokebowl

After three months I still eat a poke bowl weekly, so it was about time to make a poke bowl with pickled shiitakes myself.
And of course, a poke bowl is Hawaiian but it is heavily influenced by Japanese and other Asian cuisines. I have mine preferably with avocado, seaweed, soy beans (edamame) and pickled shiitake mushrooms. The pickled shiitake mushrooms give a delicious sweet and sour taste and it combines perfect with the freshness of the raw fish.

 

Tuna poke bowl with pickled shiitakes

Prep Time: 1 hour

Total Time: 1 hour

Yield: 2 bowls

Serving Size: 2

Tuna poke bowl with pickled shiitakes

I eat this weekly so I might be a little biased to say this is AMAZING! Tuna poke bowl, don't forget the pickled shiitakes!

Ingredients

    for the pickled shiitakes:
  • 2 oz dried shiitake mushrooms
  • 2/3 cup sugar
  • 2/3 cup soy sauce
  • 2/3 cup sushi vinegar
  • 2 inch piece of ginger, peeled and sliced
  • For the rice:
  • 1 cup sushi rice
  • 1 Tbsp rice vinegar
  • 2 Tbsp furikake seasoning
  • for the tuna:
  • 2 Tbsp soy sauce
  • 2 Tbsp ponzu sauce
  • 1 green onion, thinly sliced
  • 1 Tbsp roasted sesame seeds
  • 0.7lbs tuna, sushi grade (11 oz)
  • pinch of Hawaiian sea salt, or other course sea salt
  • for the toppings:
  • avocado, cubed
  • cooked and peeled edamame beans
  • seaweed salad

Instructions

  1. Start with pickling the shiitakes.
  2. Soak the shiitakes in hot water for 15 minutes, until they’re soft. Take them out of the water and slice them in ¼ inch slices. Strain the soaking liquid using a fine mesh strainer or clean tea towel.
  3. Put the shiitake slices in a pan and add 1 ½ cup of the soaking liquid, the sugar, soy sauce, sushi vinegar and ginger. Bring to a boil and let simmer for 30 minutes.
  4. Remove the pan from the heat and let cool in the liquid.
  5. Do the pickled shiitakes in a glass jar and add enough of the cooking liquid to cover. This keeps up for about a month in the fridge.
  6. Cook the sushi rice according to the instructions on the box.
  7. Add the rice vinegar and stir to combine. Sprinkle with the furikake seasoning. Set aside.
  8. Get all the other toppings ready before starting with the tuna.
  9. Combine the soy sauce, ponzu sauce, sliced green onion and roasted sesame seeds.
  10. Cut the tuna in 0.5 – 1 inch slices, just what you prefer. Sprinkle with the hawaiian sea salt and add to the soy sauce marinade.
  11. Stir until each cube of tuna is coated with the marinade.
  12. Start the bowls: first layer is a scoop of rice, then a scoop of tuna and the other toppings like the pickled shiitakes, cubed avocado, edamame and seaweed salad goes on the side.
  13. Sprinkle some extra furikake seasoning on top.

Notes

Recipe for the pickled shiitakes adapted from Momofuku Noodle Bar in NY

http://www.inmyredkitchen.com/tuna-poke-bowl-with-pickled-shiitakes/

Enjoy!

 

20 comments
  1. Poke is a Hawaiian word and according to the Hawaiian Dictionary Poke means “to slice, cut crosswise into pieces, as wood or fish” and it is pronounced POE-kay. The term came to be used as shorthand for any sort of raw fish, gutted and gilled, and the sliced along the backbone. When the raw fish was “prepared” it meant the fish was mashed (lomi), or other ingredients were added to it, mostly salt and savories like ‘opihi, lobster, sea urchin roe, kukui nut relish, and different kinds of limu (seaweed) etc.

    A few poke bowl restaurants in California run by Japanese are trying to redefine the word “Poke” into “Poki” and apply the same Hawaiian Dictionary definition. However it does not work as the official Hawaiian Dictionary definition for the word poki is fine as stiches or mesh; small, dainty, close together. General name for a supernatural dog after the time of Kamehameha I, said to have been taken name of Kamehameha’s favorite dog, Boss (Eng), which was deified and worshipped; name of supernatural dog on Kauai. Would you eat at a restaurant serving Dog Bowl?

  2. bride, Julie d’Angenne.

  3. handwritten books were made,

  4. drafts of literary works

  5. Since the era of Charlemagne

  6. From many manuscripts of Antiquity

  7. from lat. manus – “hand” and scribo – “I write”) ]

  8. 55 thousand Greek, 30 thousand Armenian

  9. European glory, and even after

  10. 55 thousand Greek, 30 thousand Armenian

  11. European glory, and even after

  12. handwritten books were made,

  13. new texts were rewritten

  14. from lat. manus – “hand” and scribo – “I write”) ]

  15. European glory, and even after

  16. Western Europe also formed

  17. new texts were rewritten

  18. “Julia’s Garland” (fr. Guirlande de Julie)

  19. Century to a kind of destruction:

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