Ginger-Miso Soup with Noodles
- 8 ounces udon (Japanese wheat noodles), or linguine
- 6 cups water
- 1/4 cup tamari soy sauce
- 1/2 cup roughly sliced gingerroot (keep skin on)
- 1/4 pound firm tofu, cut into 1/2inch cubes
- 2 scallions, very thinly sliced
- 1/4 cup white (sweet) miso (see Note)
- 1 tablespoon Asian ental sesame oil
- Bring 3 quarts of water to a boil and cook the udon about 6 minutes, or until tender but not mushy.
- If the starch from the noodles looks like it is about to boil over, lower the heat slightly.
- Drain the udon in a colander, rinse under cold running water, drain again, and set aside.
- In the same, pot bring the 6 cups water, the tamari, and ginger to a boil.
- Lower the heat and simmer the broth simmer 10 minutes.
- Remove ginger with slotted spoon.
- Stir in the tofu and half of the scallions and cook 1 minute, or just to heat through.
- Place the miso in a bowl, then remove about 1/2 cup of the broth and stir it into the miso to dilute it and prevent lumping.
- Pour the mixture into the broth.
- Remove the pot from the heat so the miso doesn't boil.
- Stir in the sesame oil.
- Place the udon in large soup bowls and ladle some of the very hot soup over it.
- Garnish with the remaining scallions.
- Note White miso is a sweet, mellowtasting variety that is actually yellowish tan in color.
- Miso can be purchased in natural foods stores.
udon, water, soy sauce, gingerroot, firm tofu, scallions, white, asian ental sesame oil
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/ginger-miso-soup-with-noodles-recipe.html (may not work)