Olive oil in Japanese cooking

Olive oil in Japanese cooking - Bowl Being Poured With Yellow Liquid

I recently ventured a bit outside my usual European cooking and started making recipes from a "westernized" Japanese cookbook I was gifted.

Some recipes for salads call for "vegetable oil" in the dressing. I usually make salad dressings with olive oil and didn't have canola or sunflower seed oil at the time, but I wondered: would Japanese cuisine clash with olive oil? Most dressings in the book use soy sauce and sesame oil, which are very aromatic ingredients anyway, so would olive oil be "masked" by those anyway, or do Japanese sauces/dressings nnecessarily need a more neutral oil?



Best Answer

Olive oil is not native to Japan and is never used in traditional Japanese cooking. (Yes, olives are now grown in Japan and olive oil is readily available, but so are burgers and pizza.)

Your recipe's "vegetable oil" is almost certainly a translation of the Japanese ???? sarada abura, literally "salad oil", meaning any of a number of mildly flavored, neutral oils like canola oil (probably the most common) or sunflower oil. According to the relevant JAS standard, olive oil is explicitly not a type of "salad oil".

That's the theory, but in practice, for things like salads you probably can use olive oil without significantly changing the flavor. Salads are also not traditional Japanese food, so there's more room for experimentation anyway. Stick to mild olive oils though, avoid funky extra virgin and the like, and definitely do use a "salad oil" if the recipe involves frying etc.




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Quick Answer about "Olive oil in Japanese cooking"

Olive oil is not native to Japan and is never used in traditional Japanese cooking. (Yes, olives are now grown in Japan and olive oil is readily available, but so are burgers and pizza.)

What oil is used for Japanese cooking?

Oil for tempura and other batter-fried foods: Any good oil such as peanut oil will do, but you may want to mix in 10 percent or more Chinese or Japanese sesame oil for a more authentic taste. Tempura oil from Japan, available occasionally in Japanese markets is expensive and unnecessary.

Is olive oil popular in Japan?

In 2019, Japan exported 276.23 metric tons of olive oil, a 209 % increase from 2018 and a 545% increase from 2014. China is also committing to the olive oil business.

Why should you not cook olive oil?

Olive oil has a lower smoke point-the point at which an oil literally begins to smoke (olive oil's is between 365\xb0 and 420\xb0F)-than some other oils. When you heat olive oil to its smoke point, the beneficial compounds in oil start to degrade, and potentially health-harming compounds form.

What oil is used in teppanyaki?

Animal fat or vegetable oil is used to cook the ingredients. Most restaurants in Japan highlight Kobe beef for their teppanyaki. As for the teppanyaki Western-style, the ingredients commonly used are assorted vegetables, shrimp, lobster, beef and scallops, and soybean oil is used for cooking.



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More answers regarding olive oil in Japanese cooking

Answer 2

There are olive oils that are produced in Japan and used in Japanese cuisine. It just depends on the flavors you are trying to achieve in a recipe. Sesame oil has a very strong, distinctive flavor. Olive oil can as well, but it is clearly different. It is certainly possible that flavors would be masked or changed, but if that is all you have...

This comes down to your goal. Are you trying to reproduce a recipe or cuisine authentically, are you experimenting, or are you just trying to make something that you enjoy eating for dinner? Did you use the olive oil? How was it?

Answer 3

Welcome! If your recipe is calling for vegetable oil, you would probably want something with a pretty neutral flavor.

If you have a light or extra light olive oil it would likely work well. However, many people use an extra virgin olive oil for salad dressings, dipping, etc., and the flavor may not pair as well with the other ingredients.

You can try it with the olive oil you have and see how you like it. I would definitely be interested to know the result. And a comparison would be awesome!

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