Sake Kasu Recipe: The Best Tender Marinated Chicken - Yang's Nourishing Kitchen (2024)

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Looking for a great sake kasu recipe? This sake kasu marinated chicken issuper delicious and melt-in-your-mouth tender. You will fall in love with this modernized sake kasu marinade. Itis great on chicken, as well as other meats and fish to bring out big flavours while acting as a tenderizer.

Sake Kasu Recipe: The Best Tender Marinated Chicken - Yang's Nourishing Kitchen (1)

Sake kasu, a traditional ingredient, has been regaining recognization in recent years in modern cooking. Sake kasu is appreciatedfor its nutritional values by the health enthusiasts, as well as praised for its rich umami flavour by the gourmet chefs. Meet this new ingredient that has the best of both worlds – nutrition and flavour. It will open a whole new world in your everyday cooking!

What is Sake Kasu?

Make, Use and Benefits

Sake Kasu Recipe: The Best Tender Marinated Chicken - Yang's Nourishing Kitchen (2)At the completion of fermentation, sake is pressed in order to separate the finished sake from the residual rice particles, which are known as sake kasu (酒粕).

Saka kasu can be considered the equivalent of the lees produced in wine and beer making, but it is much more than a by-product to be discarded. Sake kasu can be used for both cooking and promoting health, as it contains high concentrations of vital amino acids, proteins, minerals, and vitamins, and functions to exfoliate and hydrate skin. The major beneficial components of sake kasu are:

  • vitamin B6: antioxidant, relieves muscle and arthritis pain, skin protectant
  • folic acid: promotes cell division and repair, particularly skin and reproductive cells, anti-anemic, stimulates immune function
  • fiber: lowers the risk of diabetes, heart disease, and gastrointestinal disorders, improves nutrient absorption, and promotes immune function

(The above is an excerpt from the brochure that came with the Sake Kasu I purchased.)

History

Not only sake kasuhas been used in Japan as a valued ingredient forcenturies if not millennia, similar rice wine lees called Jiu Zao (酒糟) has been around in Chinafor even longer. It’s unclear but suspected that sake makingwasbrought to Japan from China around 2000 years ago. Wine making in China can be traced back for more than 9000 years. The use of sake kasuis extended further back to the use of jiu zao in ancient China. As rice wine fermentation by-products, both sake kasu and jiu zao were used in similarwaysin both cultures, from gourmet cooking, to beauty care, to animal feed and even as a medicine. It isn’t hard to see the long history of using rice wine lees in the traditional ways of life in the east.

In The Compendium of Materia Medica (16th century), knownas the most complete and comprehensive medical classicever written in the history of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), the medicinal function of jiu zao was written, “rice wine lees is warm in nature, nutritious, and repels the toxins in cold and raw foods.”

Sake Kasu Recipe: The Best Tender Marinated Chicken - Yang's Nourishing Kitchen (3)

Cooking with Sake Kasu

Recipe Ideas

Sake kasu can be used for making soups, dressings, sauces, and baking, among numerous other dishes. Some examples ofthe most common traditional sake kasu recipe:

  • kasujiru: a soup with miso and sake kasu soup base
  • kasuzuke: marinated fish or pickled vegetables in a thick flavoured sake kasu paste
  • amazake: a traditional Japanese sweet drink

Some examples of the modern sake kasu recipe:

  • sake kasu pasta sauce
  • sake kasu in bread making
  • sake kasu cheesecake
  • secret ingredient in many marinades and salad dressings by both Eastern and Western gourmet chefs

Sake Kasu Recipe: The Best Tender Marinated Chicken - Yang's Nourishing Kitchen (4)

Sake Kasu Marinade

Instead of re-making one of the traditional recipes, I created a modernized sake kasu marinade. It uses popular flavours that most of us already have in the kitchen. In this sake kasu recipe, I used quite a bit less of sake kasu compared to the amount in the traditional kasuzuke. I feel a little bit can go a long way in enriching theflavours and tenderizing the meat. On the plus side, I amavoiding a lot of wastage of the sake kasu that would have been thrown away after the pickling andmarinatingis done. Did I mention sake kasu is probably the best kept secret as a meat tenderizer!?!

Taste and Texture

The texture of sake kasu is much like a play dough–sticky and dense. It has a delicious savoury taste and aroma, called umami. You also find umami in other Asian fermented foods like miso and soy sauce. Note that because sake is made by fermenting rice with koji culture and yeast, sake kasu is naturally soy-free and gluten-free. There is no obvious salty or sweet taste in the sake kasu, but it does have a fair alcohol content remaining. The smell and taste of sake kasu is like a cross between miso and cooking wine.Because of the dense texture of sake kasu, you will most likely need to thin it out with other liquid.

Cooking Tips

Here is a little tip I learned from making my sake kasu marinade. If you try to break down the kasu paste in a lot of thin liquid (ie. soy sauce from this sake kasu recipe), it tends to break into smaller chunks. However, it won’t combine smoothly with rest of the ingredients in the marinade. Instead, if you break down the kasu paste in a small amount of thicker liquid (ie. maple syrup from this sake kasu recipe), it’s much easier to work it into a smooth mixture. And then you can add the rest of the liquid and other ingredients. You can see in my picturebelow for this technique. The full sake kasu recipe for my marinated chicken is at the bottom of this post.

Sake Kasu Recipe: The Best Tender Marinated Chicken - Yang's Nourishing Kitchen (5)

Where to buy Sake Kasu?

Finding sake kasu is probably the trickiest part. The best bets are Japanese stores in the fridge section, if you don’t live in Japan. You have a higher chance of finding them in the late winteras thesake making season approaching the end. They are also the most fresh around that time.

I am very lucky to be living in Toronto, where there is a cool local premium sake brewery in town. The Ontario Spring Water Sake Companyis located in downtown Toronto’s Distillery Historic District.The brewery has a retail store right attached to it where you can buy all sorts of sake related goodies.

I bought my sake kasu when I paid a visit to the store. A small tub of 250g of sake kasu costs me only $3. It will store in the fridge for a year. If you live in Toronto, I highly recommend you give them a visit. In addition to a variety of sake you can expect them to carry, they also have 2 kinds of made-in-house sake kasu salad dressings, and an all-natural sake kasu hand soup. During their sake making season, you can call in advance to pre-order koji rice to make your own miso at home.

Sake Kasu Recipe: The Best Tender Marinated Chicken - Yang's Nourishing Kitchen (6)

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Sake Kasu Marinated Chicken

This sake kasu marinated chicken is super delicious and melt-in-your-mouth tender. You will fall in love with this modernized sake kasu marinade. It is great on chicken, as well as other meats and fish to bring out big flavours while acting as a tenderizer.

4.67 from 3 votes

Print Pin Rate

Course: Main Course

Cuisine: Japanese

Prep Time: 10 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 15 minutes minutes

Total Time: 25 minutes minutes

Servings: 2 people

Calories: 377kcal

Author: Yang

Cost: $8

Ingredients

  • 4 tablespoons soya sauce Gluten-free option: use gluten-free soya sauce or Tamari
  • 2 tablespoons sake kasu
  • 2 tablespoons pure maple syrup
  • 1 tablespoon ginger finely grated
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1 teaspoon sriracha
  • 1 pound skinless and boneless chicken thigh

Instructions

  • Finely mince 2 cloves of garlic.

  • Combine sake kasu and maple syrup. It's much easier to mix sake kasu and maple syrup into a smooth paste, before adding rest of the ingredients. Add soya sauce, finely grated ginger, minced garlic, and Sriracha, mix well.

    Sake Kasu Recipe: The Best Tender Marinated Chicken - Yang's Nourishing Kitchen (8)

  • Pour the marinade over skinless and boneless chicken thigh until the chicken thighs are well coated. You can store the chicken in a ziplock bag or a storage tub. Let the chicken marinate for 24-48 hours in the fridge.

  • Grill the chicken thighs on medium to high heat, about 5-7 mins on each side, until the thickest parts are cooked through. Enjoy!

Notes

  1. This is a great prepare ahead of time dish for camping and BBQ.
  2. The sake kasu marinade is versatile, can be used on other meats such as pork and fish.
  3. The calorie calculation is based on 1 serving.

Nutrition

Calories: 377kcal

Tried this recipe?Tag me @YangsNourishingKitchen on Instagram!

Sake Kasu Recipe: The Best Tender Marinated Chicken - Yang's Nourishing Kitchen (9)

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Sake Kasu Recipe: The Best Tender Marinated Chicken - Yang's Nourishing Kitchen (2024)

FAQs

Can you marinate chicken too long in soy sauce? ›

Most recipes for marinating meat and poultry recommend six hours up to 24 hours. It is safe to keep the food in the marinade longer, but after two days it is possible that the marinade can start to break down the fibers of the meat, causing it to become mushy.

Is marinated chicken more tender? ›

Marinating chicken doesn't moisten, tenderize, or add flavor to your chicken. It's been debunked.

How long to marinate chicken for best taste? ›

As a rule of thumb, you can marinate chicken anywhere from 15 minutes to 12 hours for bone-in chicken or 2 hours for boneless. Past 12 hours, you risk the ingredients of the marinade (such as sugar, acid, and salt) breaking down the muscle fibers in the meat, causing it to go overly soft or mushy.

How long to soak chicken in marinade? ›

You can marinate chicken anywhere from 2 hours up to 24 hours, though marinating chicken for even 15 to 30 minutes can impart flavor and moisture into smaller pieces of meat. Generally, bone-in cuts of chicken, such as wings, drumsticks and breasts, will require a longer marinade time than their boneless counterparts.

Does lemon juice tenderize chicken? ›

Lemon Zest and Juice: Lemon adds brightness, acidity, and a burst of citrus flavor. The zest gives an extra zesty punch, while the juice is crucial for tenderizing the chicken.

Does soy sauce marinade tenderize meat? ›

It brings out meat's natural flavors and also tenderizes it by breaking down myosin, a tough protein found in meat, just like in a good brine. Just like salt, soy sauce is a flavor enhancer and builder. It is rich in glutamates, which makes meat taste more savory and improves juiciness.

What can I soak chicken in to make it tender? ›

By the six-hour mark, the most tenderizing marinades were the same—orange juice, lemon juice, tomato sauce, and yogurt—with the addition of rice vinegar. The buttermilk-marinated chicken was a bit more tender than before, but still not quite as soft as the others.

What not to marinate chicken in? ›

Salt pulls out moisture from ingredients, so get too heavy-handed, and you'll be dousing on the sauce at dinner to compensate for a dry bird. Same goes for overly acidic marinades, says Carla Lalli Music, BA's food director. Be mindful of how much citrus and vinegar you add.

What is the formula for chicken marinade? ›

Mix olive oil, soy sauce, lemon juice, liquid smoke, mustard, pepper, and garlic powder together in a large glass or ceramic bowl. Place chicken in the bowl and turn to coat with marinade. Cover and marinate in the refrigerator for 1 to 4 hours. For best results, do not marinate longer than 4 hours.

Do you rinse after marinade? ›

Rinsing off the marinade is less common but can be done if you prefer a milder flavor or want to remove any excess salt or acidity from the marinade [1]. If you choose to rinse the meat, make sure to pat it dry afterward to remove any excess moisture before cooking [1].

Why is my chicken hard after marinating? ›

In fact, marinades with high acidity may actually end up toughening chicken that has been left too long. For that reason, it's arguable that a quick soak is the best way to marinate chicken, especially if you're using a cut like chicken breasts, which contain less fat.

Do you season chicken after marinating? ›

Remove the meat from the marinade and pat dry before grilling or broiling. For dry-rubbed chicken: Combine the dry ingredients in a bowl. Dry the surface of the chicken well, then coat the chicken with the dry rub. For the best flavor, massage the spice rub into the chicken.

How long can you marinade in soy sauce? ›

Pour over beef or pork and marinate 8 hours or overnight. Grill or broil meat. Leftover marinade should be discarded.

Can you leave chicken in soy sauce overnight? ›

How to Make a Delicious Chicken Marinade – The Steps. Step 1: Prepare the marinade. Mix together the honey, mustard, soy sauce, and curry powder. Step 2: Put the chicken and marinade in a plastic bag or glass container, ensuring the meat is fully saturated, and marinate overnight.

How do you fix too much soy sauce in marinade? ›

Incorporate Lemon Juice, Vinegar or Sugar

You can also try mixing in a sweetener like white sugar, brown sugar, honey or agave syrup. The goal is to dilute the soy sauce and to create a harmonious blend of flavors.

What to do if I marinated chicken too long? ›

While you can cook and eat chicken that has been marinating for more than 24 hours, you're risking exposing yourself to some strange textures. Chicken can get both mushy and tough when it's been left to marinate too long. If it's been more than 48 hours, the USDA recommends throwing it out.

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