How to Use the Shiso Plant this Season | Institute of Culinary Education (2024)

How to Use the Shiso Plant this Season | Institute of Culinary Education (1)

Chef Celine Beitchman utilizes another popular plant from our hydroponic garden.

Shiso, also known as perilla, is a green or red annual plant with tender leaves that is used in Asian and South American kitchens. Though related to the mint family, its flavor tends towards earthy, herbaceous and sometimes tangy, with a savory mouthfeel — mildly sweet and satisfying.

Both an herb and a leafy green, shiso is a therapeutic food in ancient systems like Traditional Chinese Medicine. Some recent research suggests the plant may be helpful in reducing histamine overreactions and allergic symptoms related to hay fever.

Shiso is extremely versatile.

Raw leaves are delicious tossed into salads or used wherever you might add savory green herbs. Or you can cook them up like tender spinach — steamed, sautéed or tempura-fried. Red varieties can be steeped in hot water and juiced, yielding a ruby herbal concoction with a lemony bite. This pronounced color and sourness, from anthocyanins, and oxalic and ascorbic acid (commonly known as vitamin C), is responsible for the pink-hued glow and pucker of fermented Japanese umeboshi plums.

Fresh shiso can be purchased online, at farmers markets and in the produce aisle of gourmet and health food stores.

For the recipe below, I harvested two pounds of the red plant from our on-site hydroponic farm. After plucking leaves from hearty stems, I packed everything loosely in plastic bags and kept them refrigerated overnight. The next day I chose a few similar-sized leaves for tempura frying and a handful for mincing into porridge. The rest went into making shiso juice for staining eggs and using as an herbal tea base.

Pursue plant-based career training with a hydroponic garden on campus at ICE.

Why Shiso-Congee?

I love highlighting recipes from our Health-Supportive Culinary Arts curriculum that can be easily replicated in your home. This one-pot rice porridge, called congee, hails from our Food and Immunity class. While traditional congee recipes use all white rice, we include whole grains for fiber, vitamins and flavor.

In Health-Supportive Culinary Arts, we take a seasonal approach to cooking which means using what is available locally and paying attention to tastes, cravings and weather. Tasked with using up our farm’s harvest, I wanted a dish that utilized a lot of it and spoke to the cusp of season-change, something at once comforting and renewing. I wanted a warming dish for the last cold days of a long winter, with colorful and bright signals of spring.

Because congee is both an everyday dish and a celebration-worthy one, I included both styles for the home cook. A simple version is a one-pot meal (soak the grains together and cook everything up in your Instant Pot™). Once the porridge is cooked, feel free to add any ingredients that you like or have on hand.

See Also
Shiso Leaves

All of the garnishes below can be made in advance and warmed or cut before serving. Crispy tempura provides a complement to smooth creamy grains. Stovetop braised carrots of any color bring sweetness and adding in hard-cooked eggs or tempeh ups the protein content and gives the porridge a meaty chew. Once you get the hang of it, make a double batch and keep this in your recipe rotation. Any leftovers heat up quickly with a small amount of water in a clean pot.

How to Use the Shiso Plant this Season | Institute of Culinary Education (2)

Recipe

Shiso Congee with Garnishes

Yields 4-5 two-cup servings

Ingredients

  • 4-5 cups water
  • 1/2 cup white basmati rice, soaked overnight
  • 3 tablespoons long-grain brown rice, soaked overnight
  • 1/4 teaspoon sea salt
  • 2 ounces burdock root, cut into medium dice
  • 1/4 ounce ginger, minced
  • 1/4 pound onion, cut into small dice
  • 2 scallions, trimmed, bias cut
  • 1/2 ounce shiso, minced
  • 1/2 teaspoon toasted sesame oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon tamari
  • 2 sheets Nori, charred over an open flame for 30 seconds

Garnishes

  • Gomasio (1/4 cup toasted sesame seeds crushed with 1 teaspoon sea salt)
  • Shiso-stained quail eggs (see recipe below)
  • Tempura shiso (see recipe below)
  • Braised baby carrot (see recipe below)
  • Tempeh crumbles (see recipe below)

Directions

  1. In a 1-gallon pot, combine four cups of water, rice and salt. Bring to boil for 3 minutes. Add burdock, ginger and onion. Lower flame, cover and allow to simmer, stirring frequently, until rice is creamy and lightly thickened, adding more water as needed to reach desired consistency (1 to 1 1/2 hours).
  2. Off heat, stir in scallions, shiso, sesame oil and tamari. Ladle into bowls, top with torn charred nori, and add other garnishes to taste.
Shiso-Stained Quail Eggs

Yields 4-5 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 pound red shiso, stemmed
  • 5 cups water, divided
  • 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar
  • 10 quail eggs

Directions

  1. Bring 2 cups of water to boil in a large pot and add shiso leaves. Turn down heat and cook leaves for 2 minutes until they change color from red to green.
  2. Drain leaves and squeeze to extract as much red shiso juice as you can, and then add vinegar. Cool completely in an ice bath.
  3. While juice cools, bring remaining water to boil in a 1-quart pot. Turn water to simmer and gently place eggs in pot. Cook for 3 minutes and immediately submerge in an ice bath to cool completely.
  4. When cool, peel eggs and steep in shiso juice to cover for 1-2 hours until stained. Note: Use leftover juice in place of water in the braised carrot or tempura recipe, in an Arnold Palmer-style lemonade with green tea or in your favorite mocktail.
Tempura Shiso

Yields 10 leaves

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup whole wheat pastry flour
  • 1/2 tablespoon arrowroot
  • 1/2-1 cup seltzer or shiso juice
  • 10 assorted shiso leaves (red and green), washed and dried well
  • 2 cups neutral oil
  • 1/4 teaspoon sea salt

Directions

  1. Heat oil to 350˚F in a shallow frying pan.
  2. Mix pastry flour and arrowroot. Whisk in seltzer to consistency of pancake batter.
  3. Dredge leaves in batter and deep fry one or two at a time.
  4. Drain on paper towels, toss with sea salt, and serve.
Braised Baby Carrot

Yields 4-5 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 4 baby carrots, peeled, cut into 1/4-inch lengthwise pieces
  • 1 cup shiso juice or water
  • 1/2 teaspoon tamari
  • 1/4 teaspoon ginger juice

Directions

  1. Heat oil in 6-inch sauté pan, add carrots and gently sauté 2-3 minutes per side.
  2. Cover carrots with 1/2-inch water and bring to a simmer. Cook for 10 minutes, covered until carrots are tender and still intact and most of the water has been absorbed.
  3. Add tamari and cook 2 minutes more uncovered until dry. Add ginger juice and serve.
Tempeh Crumbles

Yields 1/2 cup crumbles

Ingredients

  • 4 ounces tempeh, steamed 10 minutes, cooled, crumbled or grated
  • 1 teaspoon neutral oil
  • 1 teaspoon tamari
  • 1 teaspoon brown rice syrup
  • 1 teaspoon water
  • 1/4 teaspoon smoked paprika
  • 1/4 teaspoon umeboshi paste

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 375˚F.
  2. Toss tempeh with remaining ingredients. Place on parchment-lined half sheet pan.
  3. Bake for 20 minutes, tossing from time to time to ensure all tempeh crisps.

Meet Chef Celine Beitchman.

  • Ingredient Exploration
  • Plant-Based
  • Hydroponic Garden
  • Recipe
  • ICE Instructors

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How to Use the Shiso Plant this Season | Institute of Culinary Education (2024)

FAQs

How to Use the Shiso Plant this Season | Institute of Culinary Education? ›

Shiso is extremely versatile.

How do you use a shiso plant? ›

Shiso is a member of the mint family. With its large, jagged leaves, bright color, and refreshing flavor, it can be eaten fresh, pickled, or deep-fried, and it frequently makes appearances in sushi dishes and sashimi plates. While the green leaves are suited for eating, the red leaves are used in pickling.

How to use shiso leaves in cooking? ›

Shiso is common in sushi restaurants, though it also makes appearances in Japanese soups and noodle dishes. It's sometimes battered and fried as tempura or used as an ingredient in maki, though it's most commonly associated with Japanese salt-pickled plums (umeboshi).

How do you use shiso in sushi? ›

Shiso leaves are more than just a divider or an edible garnish—they are often included as an ingredient in the sushi itself. The herb pairs well with fatty fish like salmon, yellowtail, and tuna, and can be enjoyed by wrapping a whole leaf around a piece of sashimi and dipping it in soy sauce.

What to do with shiso flowers? ›

In addition to the leaves (used fresh and dried), the flowers and seeds are edible. All three are used to flavor meat, seafood, rice, noodles and vegetables. Shiso leaves and flowers are delicious in salads, pesto, bread, iced tea, simple syrup, flavored sugar and even ice cream. Shiso is wonderful in soups and stew.

How do you dry shiso leaves for tea? ›

Method 1: Use a dehydrator or the dehydrator mode (140ºF/60ºC) of your oven to dry the leaves for 2–3 hours. Method 2: Dry the shiso in the breezy air outdoors (I recommend using a a drying rack net) for 2 days until they dry out completely.

What are the health benefits of shiso leaves? ›

The herb's anti-inflammatory characteristics are used to treat everything from asthma, arthritis, and eczema. It has also been used as a herbal treatment in Japan for generations. Shiso leaves are a fantastic, healthful addition to salads, soups, and stews since they are rich in calcium and iron.

What do Japanese use shiso for? ›

In Japanese cuisine, we sometimes see shiso added as garnish for ramen, adding a contrast to rich soups and broths. Just as shiso is used to mellow out strong flavors, frying whole shiso leaves as tempura can also help mellow out the strong flavor of the leaf.

Should you let shiso flower? ›

At the end of summer the flower buds form; you can let them flower and form seed pods, or clip them off to keep the leaves coming. Shiso flowers can be used as very pretty garnish on sashimi plates and so on. The plants die back in winter, and may self-sow for you if you leave some seed pods on them.

How do you clean shiso leaves? ›

Cleaning shiso or other greens: Clip unblemished leaves (small and large) from the stems, drop them into a very large pot of cold water. Stir the leaves for a minute, then let the water calm. The suspended leaves allow sand to precipitate to the bottom. Carefully lift the leaves out to drain in a colander.

What is the shelf life of shiso leaves? ›

Shelf Life:

Up to five days fresh. Shiso leaves pair very well with soy based sauces and dressings. In Japan they are a traditional accompaniment to raw fish (particularly sashimi), used in salads, or fried as tempura. Shiso leaves can also be pickled (how to quick pickle).

What pairs well with shiso? ›

“The bright herbal flavor the shiso leaf lends is very complimentary to tart citrus flavors like lemon, lime and passion fruit.” In the Shiso Highball, Park simply garnishes the classic whiskey soda combo with a leaf to enhance the aromatics, and in the Taketsuru Smash, he muddles red and green shiso leaves and ...

How do you preserve fresh shiso? ›

Last, but not least is the easiest way to preserve shiso for the colder seasons. Wash the shiso, dry, and lay one piece of shiso in a container, sprinkle salt, and repeat the process for all your shiso. Salted shiso lasts forever. You can wrap rice balls with them, and it adds a nice salty shiso flavor.

Is the shiso plant edible? ›

Cultivated shiso is eaten in many East and Southeast Asian countries. Wild, weedy shiso are not suitable for eating, as they do not have the characteristic shiso fragrance, and are high in perilla ketone, which is potentially toxic.

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