What’s Cooking in Gail’s Kitchen? Talking Points: Mukimame Sea Salt Starter! This is going to sound a little weird, but those who aren’t aware might be interested to know that mukimame and edamame are the same vegetable. They are both soy beans, a legume used to make tofu, soy milk, miso, and soy flour. Mukimame is the soybean after it is shelled; consequently, edamame is the soy bean in its fuzzy pod. Often a restaurant menu will offer a bowl of steamed edamame as an appetizer. You place the pod in your mouth, slide the beans out with your teeth, and then discard the pods. It’s meant to be a finger food snack you nibble over cocktails. Not everyone likes the texture or cares to graze in public. Now you have an alternative. Taste a lil bit of nutty flavor the easy way.
MUKIMAME SEA SALT STARTER
Ingredients:
10-ounce Mukimame, frozen
1 tablespoon sea salt course crystals
Instructions:
In a 2-quart double boiler, fill the saucepan with 2 1/2 cups water. Bring to a boil over medium heat. Fill the basket insert with mukimame beans. Place insert into the double boiler. Cover. Boil mukimame for 5 minutes. Drain well. Transfer mukimame to a serving bowl. Sprinkle with sea salt course crystals. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
Perfect! 😋😋 😘
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Thaaanks. 🙏🏻🍃
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A healthy, tasty, and simple-to-do appetizer!
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No complaints here. 🌱🍃😋
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😄
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Beautiful! I’ve always delighted in the simplicity of these!
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Me, too. 🌱🍃
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Thank you, Gail, for this wonderful dish!
Joanna
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Enjoy every pod! 😜🌱🍃
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It definitely has a friendlier mouthfeel when shelled! 🙂
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Tell me about it. The first time I had it, I thought you were supposed to eat the pods, like snow peas. 🤣
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😀
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Interesting snack.
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Actually, it’s quite tasty. 😋🍃
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