Homemade Miso
- 150 grams Soy beans
- 200 grams Kome koji (Rice koji)
- 75 grams Salt
- 2 medium A storage bag (a zip-top bag or similar)
- Rinse the soy beans about 4 times, and soak overnight in plenty of water.
- Drain off the soaking water, Put the soy beans in a pressure cooker, add enough water to cover, and cook under pressure for 20 minutes.
- I used dried rice koji this time which needed to be soaked in water first, so I started preparing it at this stage, but if you are using fresh rice koji instead, just prepare the koji and salt when the beans are cooked.
- When the pressure cooker has depressurized, check that the soy beans are tender enough that you can easily mash one between your thumb and forefinger.
- Scoop the beans up with a ladle, drain off the liquid by tilting the ladle against the side of the pan, and put the beans in a plastic bag.
- Mash the beans up while they are still hot using a pestle or other equipment.
- This is how the mashed beans look.This would be even easier to do if you have a food processor...
- Mix the rice koji with the salt, rubbing them together well with your hands.
- Add the cooled mashed soy beans to this.
- It's easiest if you just cut open the bag the mash is in.
- Mix well as if you were making hamburger mix.
- Press the mixture into a new clean plastic storage bag, making sure you don't leave any air pockets.
- Be especially sure to push it into the corners!
- Press out all the air in the bag before sealing it up.
- Write the date you made the miso on the bag and you're done!
- Now just let the miso mature for 6 months to a year before eating.
- Check on it occasionally for mold.
- If there is any mold, just throw out that part.
- 1 month later... no mold has grown.
- It's going well
- 2 months later... looking good.
- There's some tamari (miso liquid) and it's starting to have the color of miso.
- After 5 months.
- It's become quite soft, and there's a lot tamari.
- It looks ready to eat already, but wait patiently for another month!
- It's now a proper miso!
- Homemade miso tends to be high in salt, so use it in recipes that just call for a little of it It's terrific as a dip for vegetables.
soy beans, koji, salt, storage
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/151241-homemade-miso (may not work)