If you want this dish to be gluten-free, buy soba noodles made with 100 percent buckwheat.
As for the leftover dressing, I suggest tossing it with salad greens, grated carrots, diced avocado, and toasted sesame seeds for a zesty green salad.
| ~ | Grated zest of 1 lemon | |
| ~ | Fresh ginger, cut into a 1-inch cube, peeled, and grated | |
| 1 | Tbsp. honey | |
| ¾ | tsp. cayenne | |
| ¾ | tsp. fine-grain sea salt | |
| 1 | Tbsp. freshly squeezed lemon juice | |
| ¼ | cup unseasoned brown-rice vinegar | |
| ⅓ | cup shoyu sauce (wheat-free soy sauce) | |
| 2 | Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil | |
| 2 | Tbsp. toasted sesame oil |
| 12 | oz. dried soba noodles | |
| 12 | oz. extra-firm nigari tofu | |
| ¼ | cup chopped fresh cilantro | |
| 3 | green onions, thinly sliced | |
| ½ | cucumber, peeled, cut in half lengthwise, seeded, and thinly sliced | |
| 1 | small handful of cilantro sprigs, for garnish | |
| ¼ | cup toasted sesame seeds, for garnish |
Culinate editor’s note: To use 3/4 teaspoon of cayenne would make an intensely spicy salad. When I made this dish, I reduced the cayenne to 1/4 teaspoon and cut back on the salt as well. A tablespoon of prepared miso mixed into the dressing is delicious as well.
This content is from the book Super Natural Cooking by Heidi Swanson.
| | Table Talk: November 17A local-foods feastJosh Viertel and Jennifer Maiser want to help you have a local-foods Thanksgiving. Read the transcript of their online chat. |
The Produce DiariesMorelsPleasure in the hunt | Dinner Guest BlogA quiche lessonThe crux is the crust |
FeaturesFabulous favasA green herald of summer | Dinner Guest BlogWabi-sabi cookeryCooking is a constant history lesson |
There are 3 comments on this item
Add a comment
Unrated
33% recommend this recipe
1. by michaelnatkin on Feb 3, 2008 at 3:29 PM PST
I love otsu noodles! Here’s my variation:
http://herbivoracious.com/2007/10/recipe-otsu-noo.html
2. by anonymous on Jun 13, 2008 at 10:29 AM PDT
I have Heidi’s cookbook and just made this recipe. I recommend using the full 3/4 tsp cayenne - spicy food is good for you and it tasted wonderful. :)
3. by Syd on Jul 16, 2009 at 11:51 AM PDT
Shoyu sauce is not wheat (or gluten) free. In fact grain is a big part of the recipe. Tamari is the soy sauce that is most likely to be wheat-free but even then it should be labeled so, otherwise expect it too to have wheat in it.
Nigari for the tofu mostly refers to the coagulate used. I’m curious as to why that’s important.
Add a comment