Basic Bonito Broth — Dashi recipe (2024)

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Learn how to make Basic Bonito Broth — a delicious broth that’s made in 30 minutes, with just 5 minutes active time! From a simple pantry staple, make nutrient dense broth that’s convenient and mild (no fishy flavor at all).

We usually have the fridge stocked with bone broth — or the Instant Pot cooking it. So we are never without. Almost. Every once in a while, life gets too busy, and the stock runs out.

Enter bonito, a pantry staple. If there was ever an easy and nutrient dense broth, bonito broth is it. Bonito flakes are taken from a bag, thrown in some hot water, strained and believe it or not, your super-food (easy!) broth is ready.

Jump to Recipe

How I started making Dashi

As an older teenager my favorite past time was reading cookbooks. I read them like novels, curled up in a chair. One culture’s food I could not grasp from cookbooks alone: Japan’s. Sushi was my favorite food at the time. So in my early 20s I got a job in the kitchen of a high-end Seattle Japanese restaurant. The foreign vocabulary of mirin, chawan mushi, wakame, shiro miso, kombu, dashi and bonito became part of my repertoire as I made stocks and soups.

All the stocks I made contained bonito, measured by the bulging handful. Japanese cooking was still a mystery to me, being so different from how I grew up cooking, yet the elusiveness of it started to unfold.

There is no gelatin in bonito broth. But it is still a nutrient-dense broth. (And you can add sustainably-sourced gelatin, if desired.)

Where does it fit into your diet? It’s the fastest bone broth to make, literally taking a total of 30 minutes to produce. When you find yourself without bone broth, in a pinch, this stock is the perfect alternative.

WHAT IS BONITO & IS IT SAFE TO EAT FISH?

Bonito flakes are shavings of dried, fermented, smoked tuna. Because the shavings come from the whole fish, bones are included. It is not fishy tasting, if you’re wondering. The flavor is smoky and mild. It traditionally makes a great base for miso soup; but I’ve even made beef stew with it and you don’t know it’s there.

Is it safe to consume fish, especially tuna, based on concerns with mercury and the 2011 radiation leak off the coast of Japan?

Bonito flakes come from skipjack tuna that do not swim or migrate anywhere near the coastal waters of Japan. Tuna in general has been vindicated in regard to its levels of mercury. Health advocates and functional practitioners tell us mercury is not problematic if it is in the right ratio to selenium in the fish itself.

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TRADITIONAL BONITO BROTH

There are only two ingredients in traditional bonito broth, called dashi, other than water: kombu and bonito. For some purposes, as a substitution for long-cooking bone broth, bonito broth can be made without the kombu, for a less oceanic flavor. (Traditionally, in Japan, it is just the opposite: dashi can be made with kombu alone; or the nourishing bonito can be added optionally to make a more complete broth.)

Each portion of bonito flakes used to make broth can be used twice, once for a mild broth, and a second time for a richer, darker broth. Very economical. The recipe I provide includes kombu as an optional ingredient, if you want the Asian flavor and added nutrition. In traditional Japanese cooking these almost sacred broths, that serve as the foundation for almost all their dishes, are called first dashi and second dashi.

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Basic Bonito Broth — Dashi recipe (3)

Print Recipe

5 from 16 votes

Basic Bonito Broth

Dried Bonito flakes can be purchased at Asian or natural grocery markets.

Prep Time5 minutes mins

Total Time35 minutes mins

Course: ingredient, Main Course, Side Dish

Cuisine: Japanese

Keyword: bonito broth, dashi, recipe

Servings: 8 cups

Calories: 98kcal

Author: Megan

Cost: $1

Ingredients

  • 2 quarts filtered water plus 2 quarts more water for second batch
  • 1 cup bonito flakes packed
  • 1 ounce dried kombu optional

Instructions

  • Place optional kombu in saucepan with water.

  • Heat but do not let water boil.

  • As bubbles appear in hot water, but just before it simmers, remove optional kombu, setting it aside.

  • Add bonito flakes. Keep heat on under pot and allow water to come to boil. Then turn off heat immediately.

  • Bonito flakes will absorb water and slowly sink. Allow 3-5 minutes for this process.

  • Strain broth, reserving bonito. This is First Dashi.

  • For a second, stronger broth put 2 quarts more water back into pot with reserved kombu and bonito.

  • Heat water to barely a simmer (do not boil) for 10 minutes. Strain. This is Second Dashi.

Notes

*If you happen to be on the GAPS Introduction Diet, kombu is not allowed.

Nutrition

Calories: 98kcal | Protein: 20g | Cholesterol: 20mg | Sodium: 91mg | Potassium: 256mg | Calcium: 7mg

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Basic Bonito Broth —  Dashi recipe (2024)
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