The Japanese Pantry

Introducing The Japanese Pantry.

We are very excited about our new collaboration with The Japanese Pantry.  Greg Dunmore and Chris Bonomo have formed personal relationships with a handful of artisan producers and are importing handcrafted vinegar, tamari and soy products literally not seen outside Japan.

We caught up with Greg Dunmore, co-founder of The Japanese Pantry, recently to hear more about how he came to procure these ingredients.  Greg is an accomplished San Francisco chef with twenty plus years of experience. Throughout his career, he has run critically acclaimed restaurants and earned Michelin Stars. Greg’s passion for Japanese food came early on and was most visible in his last venture as chef/owner of Nojo, a San Francisco top 100 restaurant, where he created his own unique Japanese-inspired California Izakaya. Over the years of traveling to Japan Greg forged relationships with artisanal producers and is excited to help them bring their products to the US.

Specialty Foods Boston:  How did you come to start importing these artisan products?

Greg:  It was based on years of working with amazing olive oils from Italy to superb vinegar from Spain and realizing the soy sauce and sesame seeds we were using were mediocre at best.

SFB:  What made you focus on Japanese ingredients in particular?

Greg:  Since we traveled to Japan often, we discovered that there were all these amazing products that could not be found in the US.  Yet it was not until we visited Wadaman, and tasted his virgin sesame oils that I decided I wanted to import them.

SFB:  Your products are much different than the stuff that’s commercially available.  What person or experience inspired you to do things this way?

Greg:  Wadaman’s sesame oils.  Chefs have been quick to embrace them.  As soon as they taste them, they tend to jump right in.

Wadaman Farm

Wadaman Co, Ltd, in Osaka, is considered one of the best sesame roasters in Japan.  They are a fifth-generation sesame roaster that has been sourcing the best sesame seeds in the world, carefully sorting them, and roasting them for over 130 years.  The current roaster has been roasting seeds himself for 45 years, six days a week.  The seeds go through a twelve-step process before being roasted.  We are excited to introduce some of their sesame products.

Wadaman Black Sesame Oil, 500 ml.

This golden-hued oil is cold-pressed from Bolivian black sesame seeds.  Extra virgin.  Notes of vanilla and cocoa with a warm, gently nutty aroma.  This delicately roasted oil would be an excellent finishing oil for raw fish or steamed green vegetables.

Wadaman White Sesame Oil, 500 ml.

This pale golden oil is cold-pressed from white Ethiopian sesame seeds.  Extra Virgin.  Light yet luxurious mouthfeel.  Clean, pure flavor.

Wadaman Black Sesame Paste, 1 kg.

The response from chefs who have tried this product so far has been overwhelming.  This rich, nutty, smooth black sesame paste has the potential for very interesting savory and pastry applications.  Traditional as a filling for glutinous rice balls, there are many more modern adaptations cropping up:  this beautiful black and white sesame tart, for example, or black sesame ice cream (delicious, we’ve made it) black sesame macarons, black sesame pannacotta, black sesame chiffon cake, and so on.  My wish is for someone to make black sesame Oreos.  Savory-side, we have yet to see many developments but are excited to see what you all do in that space.  Tag us in your black sesame Instagram photos, and we’ll send you something cool.

Iio Jozo, in the Kyoto Prefecture, makes some of the best rice wine vinegar in Japan.  Forget what you think you know about rice vinegar.  The cheap commercial stuff you’re used to does the entire category injustice. A fifth-generation distillery is a farm to bottle operation.  First, they use organic rice from their neighbors’ farms.  Then, they make their own sake, a 45-day process.  After that, they turn their sake into vinegar.   It takes two years to go from field to bottle.  In comparison, large commercial rice wine vinegar maker turns their product around in about two days.  They also use much more rice per bottle of vinegar than commercial producers do.  Legally, in Japan rice wine vinegar must contain 40 grams of rice to make a liter.  To make a decent one, you really need 120 grams of rice per liter.  Iio Jozo uses 200 grams of rice per liter, and you can truly taste the difference.

Iio Jozo Pure Rice Wine Vinegar, 900 ml.

Think of this as very good sake, because that’s what it’s made from.  The flavor of this vinegar is almost like a ripe and unripe peach put together in perfect balance: the full flavor of ripe fruit, plus a tartness that’s perfectly round and free of any sharp edges or harshness.  A few drops of this vinegar would enhance many things: think a ripe piece of fruit you want to make slightly savory, or turn into a vinaigrette or pickle.  A bright mignonette for oysters, perhaps especially west coast oysters with all their cucumber-melon qualities.  A beautiful escabeche, where the only things that matter are the fish and the vinegar.  Crudo.  Think of it as a new pantry staple you can reach for any time you need to brighten a dish.

Iio Jozo Brown Rice Wine Vinegar, 900 ml.

Make with 280 grams of brown rice per liter. A meatier companion to the pure rice vinegar.  Oily fish, mushrooms, tomatoes, tartare, an earthy mignonette, or ponzu.  Built-in umami.

Iio Jozo Akasu Red Vinegar, 360 ml.

Since Iio Jozo makes their own sake, they end up with the by-product, sake kasu (aka sake lees).  At Iio Jozo, they take the sake kasu and turn it into akasu red vinegar.  This product is aged for 10 years before being released.  Think sherry vinegar crossed with rice wine vinegar.  Limited.

note the cedar barrel in the background

Ito Shoten,  in Taketoyo, Aichi Prefecture, has been making miso and tamari for over 200 years.  This is an eleventh-generation producer.  They age their product in ancient cedar barrels (ranging from 120-200 years old) and weigh down their miso with river stones.  The only ingredients are koji, water, salt, and soybeans.  What makes the use of these ancient cedar barrels so important is the flavor it imparts–not so much from the wood, but from the characteristics the barrels take on over time, giving the products their signature flavors.

Ito Shoten Tamari, 720 ml.

Tamari means “of a pressing,” and that explains very well what this product is.  When miso is made, the brine it releases is what becomes the tamari.  The Aichi prefecture is known for its very dark miso, and accordingly, this tamari is dark and rich.  This needs nothing more than raw fish, although a few drops in a mushroom or game broth would be welcome.   The wheat-free aspect is a side bonus if you want something you can use to massively amplify the flavor of something without adding any gluten, a handy thing to have in the pantry.  Check out those barrels, below- the youngest one is 120 years old.

barrel room

 

By Diego Maldonado

Agretti, Native French Breakfast Radishes, and Santa Rosa Plums

Now In: Agretti, Native French Breakfast Radishes, and Santa Rosa Plums

Knoll Farm Santa Rosa Plums and Patterson Apricots are in.  Cot n’ Candy Apriums from Frog Hollow are candy-sweet and not to be missed.  Agretti, an Italian plant with needle-shaped leaves, similar in flavor to pousse pied, is here.  Sometimes called land seaweed, agretti has a flavor that is reminiscent of spinach but more mineral-y. 

Now is the time to try Hodo Soybeanery’s legendary Yuba skin.  If you’re wondering what that is, it’s the skin that forms on the vat of soybean milk as it’s being turned into tofu.  It’s considered a delicacy and after tasting it, we know why.  See what they do here. Or watch Daniel Patterson make it look easy here.  SF Chronicle’s article on Hodo Soybeanery’s Yuba is pretty much a who’s who of CA restaurants.

Fresh Yuba Skin from Hodo Soybeanery


Wild Agretti
Wild Oregon Pousse-Pied
Black Mission Figs

Knoll Organic Farm
Brentwood, CA

Santa Rosa Plums
Patterson Apricots

Frog Hollow Farm
Brentwood, CA

Crimson Lady Peaches
Cot n’ Candy Apriums

Fitz Kelly Farm
Reedly, CA

Lady in Red Peaches
Rose Diamond Yellow Nectarines
Lovely Lolita White Nectarines
Modesto Apricots

Fresh Maine Duck Eggs
-from Hershberg Family Farms-

Willamette Rhubarb Growers

Canby, OR

Field-Grown Rhubarb

Equinox Farm

Sheffield, MA

Native Mesclun Greens
Baby Arugula
Baby Pea Tendrils 

Native Produce

Baby Red/Gold/Candy Beets
French Breakfast Radishes
Easter Egg Radishes
Baby Turnips
Garlic Scapes
Nasturtium Blossoms
Lacinato Kale
Lemon Cucumbers (limited)
Maine Fiddleheads
Spring-dug Parsnips from Hadley, MA
Chive Blossoms
Lovage
Anise Hyssop (v. limited)

Now in Season:

Fresh English Peas
Fresh Fava Beans
Fresh Green Garbanzo Beans
California Sugar Snap Peas
Spring Onions, with tops

Black Radish
Watermelon Radish
Romanesco Cauliflower
Orange/Purple/Green Cauliflower
California Sugar Snap Peas

California Bing Cherries
California Apricots
California Peaches
California Nectarines
Yellow Watermelons

By Diego Maldonado

Hodo Soybeanery’s incredibly versatile fresh Yuba

State Bird Provisions is one among many to regularly feature Hodo Soybeanery’s legendary Yuba skin.  If you’re wondering what that is, it’s the skin that forms on the vat of soybean milk as it’s being turned into tofu.  It’s considered a delicacy and after tasting it, we know why.  See what they do here. Or watch Daniel Patterson make it look easy here.  SF Chronicle’s article on Hodo Soybeanery’s Yuba is pretty much a who’s who of CA restaurants.

We spoke with Minh Tsai, of Hodo Soybeanery, to learn more about his process.

We chatted with Minh Tsai, founder of Hodo Soybeanery, to learn more about the roots of Hodo.

SFB: What made you specialize in tofu and yuba?

Minh: I always loved to cook, and here in the Bay Area in the early 2000s, the organic farming & artisan food world was starting to gain a foothold in the minds & mouths of folks here.

All areas of the food world here were beginning to produce wonderful raw ingredients and products, however, something so simple, clean, and basic as tofu, a staple in the Asian family pantry was missing.

Fresh tofu and yuba, traditionally made and consumed daily in Asia were not easily found on Asian nor Western store shelves at that time, so I decided to learn how to make a tofu with traditional culinary value, the highest nutritional value, and with the cleanest ingredients available to me.

After an enthusiastic response at the Palo Alto Farmers’ Market and growing demand through word-of-mouth, I left my career in finance. In 2004, I founded what would become Hodo – a company whose mission is to craft the highest quality, best-tasting, freshest soymilk, tofu, and yuba possible.

SFB: Your tofu and yuba are different than much of the stuff that’s commercially available.  What experience/person inspired you to do things this way? Is it harder to do things your way?  Why do you do it anyway?

Minh: Before immigrating to the US, I grew up in Vietnam, where some of my earliest memories were going to the tofu stand with my grandfather.  These early food memories have been with me every step of the way in learning how to make tofu.

We don’t want to make a product that has a good pedigree (organic, non-GMO, US sourced beans) and made by hand, then not have the texture & flavor profile be flexible enough for different applications.  We feel like tofu and yuba are often considered secondary ingredients, should be cheap, or are a substitute for meat and for that reason, the tofu space has not changed for decades in this country.

We do a lot of tweaking in our production process to ensure artisan quality, especially as we’ve grown, since we do have to mechanize things to be viable.  However, we choose to use machines to do the “hard” work and still need people to do the artisan aspects of our food making to get the right final product. Our yuba, to this day is still 100% hand-made.  We’re proud of that! Other tofu makers will ask us how we do it; when we say we do it the old-school way of hand cutting and folding, they are usually incredulous.

SFB: Anything you wish chefs (and servers, and consumers) realized about your product that they might not know?  

Minh: We’re extremely humbled by the fact that so many types of customers use our tofu and yuba.  We’re incredibly surprised that the range of customers is so diverse and use our products in vastly different ways.  In some sense, that’s a testament to the product itself and is based on an immediate visceral reaction after tasting. (We’ve had many home and professional cooks tell us they hated tofu until they tried ours.) By chefs, it hasn’t been pigeon-holed as an Asian culinary ingredient.

Our range of clients goes from Japanese and Chinese to French, Mexican and from food trucks to Michelin Star restaurants. On that front, we’re lucky to have innovative chefs understand tofu and yuba simply to be a food ingredient to be treated like any other. We do a lot of education and work with chefs to come up with ways of incorporating our products into their repertoires.

By Diego Maldonado

Frog Hollow Peaches, White Nectarines & Native Strawberries

Now In: First of the season Frog Hollow Crimson Lady Peaches.

We also have Will Brokaw’s Gem Avocados. They have a short season of a few weeks. This buttery avocado is known for its exceptional texture and flavor.

Now is the time to try Hodo Soybeanery’s legendary Yuba skin.  If you’re wondering what that is, it’s the skin that forms on the vat of soybean milk as it’s being turned into tofu.  It’s considered a delicacy and after tasting it, we know why.  See what they do here. Or watch Daniel Patterson make it look easy here.  SF Chronicle’s article on Hodo Soybeanery’s Yuba is pretty much a who’s who of CA restaurants.

Fitz Kelly Peaches, White Peaches, Yellow Nectarines and White Nectarines are in.   We have some beautiful native Chive Blossoms and some native Nasturtium Blossoms.

Say Goodbye: to all spring Knoll Farm products, Muscat Grapes, and Ramps.


Fresh Yuba Skin from Hodo Soybeanery

Will Brokaw’s Avocados

Pell Farm Strawberries

Frog Hollow Farm
Brentwood, CA

Crimson Lady Peaches
Golden Rainier Cherries

Fitz Kelly Farm
Reedly, CA

May Crest Peaches
Virgin Blush White Peaches
Zee Fire Yellow Nectarines
Lovely Lolita White Nectarines

Native Produce

Native Fiddleheads
Native Stinging Nettles
Native French Breakfast Radishes
Native Asparagus
Native French Breakfast Radishes
Native Easter Egg Radishes
Native Baby Turnips
Native Fava Leaves & Green Garlic
Ward’s Farm Nasturtium Flowers
Native Spring-dug Parsnips from Hadley, MA

NJ Asparagus
Native Chive Blossoms (ltd)
Wild Oregon Morel Mushrooms-

Fresh Maine Duck Eggs
-from Hershberg Family Farms-

perfect with asparagus and morels

Willamette Rhubarb Growers

Canby, OR

Field-Grown Rhubarb

Equinox Farm

Sheffield, MA

Native Mesclun Greens
Baby Arugula
Baby Pea Tendrils 

Now in Season:

Fresh English Peas
Fresh Fava Beans
Fresh Green Garbanzo Beans
California Sugar Snap Peas
Spring Onions, with tops
Holland White Asparagus

Black Radish
Watermelon Radish
Romanesco Cauliflower
Orange/Purple/Green Cauliflower
California Sugar Snap Peas

California Bing Cherries
California Apricots
California Peaches
California Nectarines
Yellow Watermelons

Champagne Mangos
California Kumquats
Meyer Lemons
Pomegranates (Chile)

By Diego Maldonado

French Breakfast Radishes, Ramps, and Lovage

Now Native: French Breakfast Radishes, Ramps, and Lovage.

Wild Oregon Morels are DOWN in price.  Many spring items now local, including French Breakfast Radishes, Spring Dug Parsnips, Fiddleheads and more.  We have asparagus from both Hadley MA and NJ. Lovage has been added to the lineup.  We are getting in limited amounts of Lemon Verbena and fresh Lavender from Knoll Farm.

Coming Soon: Hodo Yuba Skin, Japanese Black Sesame Paste & Black Sesame Oil, Small Batch Tamari, Wild Za’atar leaves- stay tuned!

Say goodbye: 86, Season Over, No More- purple artichokes, mustard flowers, green and purple daikon, macomber turnips and cara cara oranges

Native Ramps
Native Fiddleheads
Native Stinging Nettles
Native French Breakfast Radishes
Native Asparagus
Native Lovage (ltd)
Native Spring-dug Parsnips from Hadley, MA

NJ Asparagus
Onion Blossoms
Chive Blossoms (ltd)
Fresh Green Almonds
Wild Oregon Morel Mushrooms- PRICE DROP

Knoll Organic Farm

Brentwood, CA

Fresh Lavender (ltd)
Lemon Verbena (ltd)
Green Garlic
Fava Leaves
Cardoon
Wild Rapini

Fresh Maine Duck Eggs
-from Hershberg Family Farms-

perfect with asparagus and morels

Green Sunshine Farm

Hodgdon, ME

Russian Banana Fingerling Potatoes

Willamette Rhubarb Growers

Canby, OR

Field-Grown Rhubarb

Equinox Farm

Sheffield, MA

Native Mesclun Greens
Baby Pea Tendrils (ltd)

Now in Season:

Fresh English Peas
Fresh Fava Beans
Fresh Green Garbanzo Beans
California Sugar Snap Peas
Spring Onions, with tops
Holland White Asparagus

Black Radish
Watermelon Radish
Romanesco Cauliflower
Orange/Purple/Green Cauliflower
Jerusalem Artichokes

Seedless Pink Muscat Grapes
Champagne Mangos
California Kumquats
Sicilian Blood Oranges
Meyer Lemons
Gold Nugget Mandarins
Pomegranates (Chile)

By Diego Maldonado