Umami Dashi Pack Tomato

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In Japanese cuisine, dashi traditionally means kombu and bonito. This one is made from tomatoes — and chefs who taste it for the first time often pause mid-sip. The umami is deeply concentrated, the acidity is clean, and the flavor is unmistakably, distinctly tomato.

The fruit tomatoes come from a small family-owned farm in Niigata and are harvested at peak maturity. Sweeter than a Roma, brighter than a cherry tomato, they carry the kind of concentrated umami that usually requires hours of reduction to achieve. Tomatoes that don't meet the farm's visual standards — too small, cracked, irregularly shaped — are dried and blended into this dashi rather than discarded

Basil, oregano, and Italian tomato powder round out the blend. The herb profile is Mediterranean, which puts this dashi as comfortably in a beurre blanc or a braise as in a Japanese clear soup. It works cleanly with cream, cheese, and shellfish, and holds its own as a dry seasoning base for meat and fish.

The packet simmers whole for a clear tomato broth, or opened and used directly as a seasoning in sauces, braises, marinades, and rubs.

No chemical seasonings. No animal-derived ingredients.

Tomato powder, onion, salt, sugar, tomato, starch hydrolysate, yeast extract, basil, oregano. Made in Japan.

Vegan. No animal-derived ingredients. No chemical seasonings or preservatives. Produced from domestic Japanese ingredients (Niigata). Contains none of the nine major US allergens

Standard: 1 bag · 0.25 oz (7g) × 5 packets
Bundle: Bundle of 6 · 30 packets total (6 bags)
Yield per packet: Brews approx. 13–17 fl oz (400–500ml) of broth

As broth (packet method)
Place one packet in a pot with 400–500ml (13–17 fl oz) of cold water. Stir the packet five times. Bring to a medium boil, then simmer for 5 minutes. Remove the packet.

As dry seasoning (open packet method)
Tear the packet open and add the powder directly — into a braise, sauce, marinade, or as a dry rub before searing. Disperses cleanly. Concentrated: start with half a packet and adjust.

Pairing profile
The fruit tomato's natural acidity cuts cleanly through fat, making it especially suited to cream, butter, and cheese. The basil-oregano backbone gives it broad affinity with Mediterranean preparations, while its concentrated umami allows it to hold up well in reductions.

Application by dish
• Shellfish — à la nage: Brew the broth, add clams, mussels, cockles, or razor clams, and steam until open. The tomato's acidity replaces white wine in the nage; the basil-oregano profile completes the dish without additions. Mount with cold butter just before serving.

• Fish — tomato court bouillon: Use as a tomato-based court bouillon for poaching turbot, halibut, sea bass, or skate. Hold at 160–180°F. Serve the fish swimming in a small pour of the strained poaching liquid — this is the dish.

• Beurre blanc: Reduce 200ml of broth with minced shallot and a splash of dry white wine until nearly syrupy. Mount with cold unsalted butter over low heat. The tomato's acidity does the emulsification work — a pale blush beurre blanc with more depth than the classic.

• Braising: Replace a portion of red wine or veal stock in short rib, osso buco, pork belly, or lamb shoulder braises. Reduce the braising liquid after cooking and mount with butter for the sauce.

• Risotto: Use as the cooking stock throughout. During mantecatura, stir in a pinch of the dry powder to intensify tomato presence before adding butter and Parmigiano.

• Pan sauce: After searing chicken, duck, or white fish, deglaze with the broth and reduce by half. Finish with cold butter or crème fraîche. Sharper than a classic jus, less sweet than a gastrique.

• Warm tomato vinaigrette: Reduce to roughly a quarter of its volume until lightly syrupy. Whisk in a neutral oil and a touch of sherry vinegar while warm. Use immediately over grilled or roasted vegetables — fennel, zucchini, eggplant.

• Meat and fish rub (dry powder): Mix the dry powder with olive oil, flaky salt, and black pepper. Apply to chicken thighs, rack of lamb, pork chops, or oily fish before roasting or grilling. The tomato's natural sugar promotes a clean caramelized crust.

Timing note: When using the dry powder as a finishing seasoning, add off-heat or just before plating — extended high-heat exposure reduces the basil and oregano aromatics.

Store in a cool, dry place, away from direct sunlight and humidity. No refrigeration required before opening.

Best before: 6 months from production date.