I like making soups and porridges. I usually add salt and pepper at the beginning to add flavor. Recently, a friend gave me a bottle of soy sauce and Im experimenting with it.

What would it make more sense? to add the soy sauce with the other ingredients before the mix boils, while boiling or only to add it before serving?

Another question is: should I use salt if I use soy sauce? Apparently, this sauce has a lot of sodium.

  • LanternEverywhere@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Its flavor is pretty indestructible, you can add it any time you like. If you add it early to any dish with solid materials (meat, veggies, etc) then its flavor will get more into the pieces you’re cooking. Oh and yeah if you’re adding soy sauce then DEFINITELY add less/no salt in addition

  • rmuk@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    I chug it straight from the bottle as I wait for my porridge to microwave.

  • Shirasho@lemmings.world
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    1 year ago

    It can be an unsung hero in many tomato-based recipes. I use a tablespoon of it when I make jambalaya and beef stew.

  • 1stq@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I recommend getting Mirin (sweet rice wine) to add it to soy sauce dishes.
    Those two are the main ingredients of Teriyaki sauce.

  • walter_wiggles@lemmy.nz
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    1 year ago

    Adding salt in the beginning is a waste. Better to add salt at the end when you’re ready to eat. That way you won’t have to use as much.

        • Faresh@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          When I first started cooking, I never salted my food because I noticed no difference. Now I’ve begun salting food, but it’s generally so much that other people perceive it as oversalted, because only then do I see a difference. Maybe I’m salting too late (since most recipes have it as a last step)? What difference does it make to add salt at the end vs at the beginning?

    • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      This is also still a waste. I just mount a salt lick (himilian pink of course) at my dinner table and periodically give it at lick while eating. You activate the salt receptors on your tongue whilst consuming very little actual sodium this way.

      • otp@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        You activate the salt receptors on your tongue whilst consuming very little actual sodium this way.

        This makes it sound like it works…and that it’s a perfectly normal thing to do. I love it

    • amio@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      No! What?

      Salt or no salt can hugely affect how things behave and “eat”, by drawing out moisture or a bunch of other mechanisms.

  • popcorp@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    Take some leftover rice from yesterday, or prepare some by steaming.

    Heat a pan, drop a tablespoon of oil in. Fry any form of fresh garlic and ginger in it. Throw in the rice. Stir, mix, fry.

    Then mix the soy sauce into the rice, mix. Start with smaller amount, you can add more later. Crack an egg or two and pour them in. Mix for a while until the eggs cook.

    Top with a spring onion, Lao gan ma chilli crisp, sesame oil, sesame. Serve.

    Most of the ingredients in the recipe are optional, you really just need the rice, soy sauce and eggs.

    If you like porridges, try making some congee, it is easier if you have a rice cooker. The rest of the recipe is almost the same as with the fried rice above.

  • If you’re unsure, you can always add a dash of soy sauce to your individual portion to familiarize yourself with the salty umami flavors and thus be better able to understand and use the flavor

    It’s an excellent ingredient in a marinade or a salad dressing

  • ares35@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    according to my co-worker, if you still have some left in the bottle, you haven’t used enough.

  • Teknikal@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Soy sauce I find strange I know people are meant to love it but I honestly can’t even taste it.

    I’ve tried using it quite a lot because I’m a huge fan of Asian food but soy sauce stumps me as I can’t taste any difference. I can tell the difference if I add actual msg but not with soy sauce.

  • weeeeum@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Depends what flavour you want and dishes you make. There is a lot of soy sauce and a lot of dishes made with it. General rule, use cheap soy sauce for frying/sauteing. In this case the acidity is cooked out and it will add a salty umami flavour, without much sour taste. We don’t use expensive soy sauce here because like the acidity, the complex flavours only found in expensive soy sauce are cooked off and evaporate into the air.

    When finishing a dish or making a dipping sauce is where quality soy sauce shines.

    I personally use Tsuru Bishio as it is one of the last, if not the last soy sauce brand to be traditional fermented instead of machine processed. It’s important because the traditional method (especially the wood barrels) adds a lot of depth to it. It might be hard to notice it at first but after using it for a while I can never go back. Plus it’s a great value since it’s so concentrated and strong you need very little of it. I go through a 40$ bottle in about 4-5 months with frequent use.

    A sushi dipping sauce I like to make is

    2 parts soy sauce 1 part sake A few drops extra virgin sesame oil A small amount of minced shallots 5-6 paper thin slices of raw garlic

    It’s very strong and a little pungent (meaning a tingling/burning sensation on the tongue, similar to spicy) but very flavourful. It can be tamed by reducing sake, garlic and adding a few extra drops of oil.

    Other than dipping sauces finishing soy sauce can be drizzled over a dish ready to be served/eaten.

    Soy sauce definitions

    Light soy sauce (usually Chinese): it’s thinner than most and has more salt added to it. It’s not low quality, simply a different type for different flavours

    Dark soy sauce (usually Chinese): harbors a much stronger soy flavour and is much darker (duh!). It has slightly less sodium compared to light.

    Finishing soy sauce (usually Japanese): typically much richer and slightly thicker soy sauce with deep and complex, delicate flavours that are easily cooked off accidentally.

    There are even more but these are the only ones I use in lots of Asian cooking. I also generally avoid food products imported from China because of their dubious regulation, corruption and pollution that make them potentially harmful. Look for brewed in Japan/USA