Furikake, the savory Japanese seasonings for sprinkling on rice, merits an entire section even in Manhattan’s tinyest Japanese markets. And if you’ve had it, you understand why: It enlivens a plain bowl of rice—add some mayo[link to Japanese Mayo recipe] and a fried egg and you can call it a meal (I relied heavily on furikake when I lived in a dorm room with just a rice cooker for making dinner). Furikake taste good on almost any savory food you can imagine; you’ll find yourself shaking it onto salad, popcorn, and soup.
The simplest versions of furikake include as few as two ingredients, usually dried fish and seaweed. That might sound like a very fishy flavor, but it’s more salty and umami (think miso soup, not canned sardines). You’ll see mixtures with bits of dried egg, shrimp, salmon roe, shiso, wasabi, and even buttered potato (I doubt that last one is natural). They come in jars for shaking into your bowl and in packets that are meant to be mixed with rice for omusubi (rice balls).
For me, the point of making my own furikake is to choose straightforward ingredients with clear flavors. My basic recipe starts with sesame seeds, katsuobushi (bonito flakes), and toasted nori seaweed. You can use flavored nori to add the taste of soy sauce or teriyaki, or nori that is already flaked, but I prefer sheets like you would use for sushi. If I can find tiny dried anchovies or shrimp, I’ll add those too—I especially like shrimp for the pretty color they add. I season mine liberally with salt and sugar, but if you use flavored nori, you may want to back off on the salt. —Hannah Kirshner
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