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8 ways to get your umami flavour fix

You’ll find it in fermented fish sauce, sun-dried tomatoes and a jar of Vegemite. Yep, we’re talking about umami, the 'fifth taste' known for bringing ‘deliciousness’ to dishes around the world. Here are some of the top combos to give your tastebuds a tingle.

Vegetarian pho

This vegetarian pho uses Vegemite in its broth. Source: Georgia McDermott

--- For more umami hits tune into In Search of Umami, as chef Robert Allison travels to South Korea (where his umami adventures include a kim chi making session with his Korean-born mother), Vietnam, Singapore and Malaysia, Sundays 6pm 7 February-14 March on SBS Food. Episodes will also be available via SBS On Demand after they air. ---

 

Taking its name from the Japanese word for ‘delicious’, umami is the indiscernible element that gives food ‘wow factor’.  Known for its rich, almost meaty intensity, the so-called fifth taste – technically glutamic acid – can be found in meats, seafood, aged cheeses and certain vegetables. It’s the secret to homemade stocks, and the reason we find a sauced-up sausage roll so darn satisfying.
Chef Robert Allison, host of In Search of Umami, a show all about this deliciousness, calls "the fifth dimension of taste". His travels across Asia in the show see the Korean-English chef dive into the making and eating of everything from doenjang and fermented shrimp to salted eggs. 

There's plenty of umami to be had in your own kitchen, though. 

For an extensive list of foods umami-rich foods, check out the Umami Information Centre. (Yes, it’s really a thing.) The site is an encyclopedia of all things glutamic acid, including an illustrated “umami around the world” map that’s cute and interesting in equal parts. While tomato is one of the most commonly used umami enhancers, a great number of fermented, dried and salted ingredients also do the trick. From Ghanaian shito (smoked fish sauce) and Polish sausages to Russian herrings and Korean doenjang (soybean paste), it seems that umami is loved the world over – whether we know it or not. 

Here are eight ways to quell your umami cravings.  


Kikunae Ikeda discovered the fifth taste thanks to experimenting with dashi, so it seems only fitting that this stock base makes an appearance. Making your own is surprisingly simple. Adam Liaw’s recipe calls for kombu, cold water and bonito flakes, and will be ready in 25 minutes flat.
Scallops with seaweed butter
Scallops with seaweed butter Source: SBS Food
Pasta lovers will be pleased to know that the pillars of a good puttanesca (tomatoes and anchovies) are rich in glutamic acid. This gluten-free version pairs the ingredients with spiralised zucchini and a welcome chilli hit.
Guilt-free spaghetti puttanesca
Source: Joe Sarah
Pungent pickled fish condiments are packed with umami. Naturally, this Thai pawpaw salad (tum mahk hoong) one seriously delicious dish.
recipe-image.jpg
No wonder the Mediterranean diet has so many converts. Aside from being healthy, it’s crazy tasty, too.  This antipasti plate prepared by Tama O Carey includes pickled mushrooms (umami tick), Parmesan custard (tick) and a healthy spread of cured meats (tick).
SalumiPlate-01.jpg
All seafood contains a certain level of umami, but the shelled variety is particularly blessed. Seaweed, too, is brimming with tongue-tingling glutamates. Pairing barbecued prawns, nori strips and a drizzle of dashi butter, this recipe is basically the holy umami trinity.
Barbecue shrimp with dashi butter and nori
Barbecue shrimp with dashi butter and nori Source: Chris Chen

6. Kimchi

"Umami, to me, is an emotional thing. It's something that comforts and helps. Food is so evocative," says chef Robert Allison, reflecting on the experience of making kimchi with his mother in Busan in South Korea, during his travels for In Search of Umami. "Growing up in England, my mum never really taught me how to cook Korean food because when she left Korea in the 1980s, it was deemed a very odd thing for man to cook ... so I never actually learn to make kimchi," he explains. Kimchi pops up several times in the show - after all, it's an excellent example of different techniques create this unique taste element. "The more mature an ingredient is, the more umami there will be. One way to achieve this is through fermentation where enzymes are given the time to break down the tissues and free up all those glutamates within," Allison explains. 

Give it a go in a traditional Korean kimchi, a quick wombok and radish kimchi, or change up the vegetables with carrot kimchi or cucumber kimchi.
Traditional kimchi
Traditional kimchi Source: SBS Food
We can thank Christina Tosi for concocting this sweet, salty, umami butterscotch-like spread. It only takes a few minutes and this (intentionally) burnt miso sauce is superb next time you reach for the ice-cream scoop.
Miso butterscotch sundae
Source: Milk Bar Life
Umami hunter Adam Liaw shares his saucy wisdom with this “boosted soy sauce” recipe. No, it’s not some salty protein shake, but rather a soy sauce infused with sake, mirin, shiitake and bonito flakes.

And like a fine wine… this bottle only improves with age! 

 

PLUS - an Aussie umami bonus:
This is the quintessential Australian beef pie, flavoured with beer and Vegemite. If you like your pies a little chunky and more rustic, use chuck steak; if you prefer them more like the ones you get at the footy, use minced beef.
Aussie beef pies
Source: Murdoch Books

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SBS Food is a 24/7 foodie channel for all Australians, with a focus on simple, authentic and everyday food inspiration from cultures everywhere. NSW stream only. Read more about SBS Food
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8 ways to get your umami flavour fix | SBS Food