Japanese Pantry Essentials
Where to start with Japanese food staples
If you're new to cooking Japanese food at home, the shopping list is shorter than you might think. A good soy sauce and a bag of short-grain rice will get you further than any single bottle of sauce ever could. Add mirin for its gentle sweetness, a jar of miso paste, and dashi or katsuobushi flakes for the backbone of umami running through nearly every Japanese meal. These are the Japanese staples that do the real work. And the ones you'll reorder as soon as you finish them.
Beyond that starting shelf, a few essential Japanese ingredients are worth considering. Toasted sesame oil brings a warm, nutty aroma the moment it hits a hot pan. Rice vinegar sharpens dressings and pickles without overpowering. And some nori, furikake and a bag of udon or soba noodles mean supper is twenty minutes away, not an hour.
Everything in this collection has been picked with everyday cooking in mind. No obscure single-use bottles, no seasonal one-offs. Just the Japanese food staples we'd keep in our own kitchens.
Building meals with your Japanese cooking essentials
Once the cupboard is stocked, cooking gets easier. A bowl of rice topped with grilled fish, a spoon of miso, a scatter of sesame seeds and a sheet of nori becomes a full meal in no time. That's the promise of a well-built Japanese pantry. Dinner without the drama, night after night.
For soups and simmered dishes, dashi is the starting point. A quick infusion of kombu and katsuobushi gives you a clean, gently smoky broth that carries miso, tofu, wilted greens and noodles beautifully. Ramen and udon reward the same base with heartier toppings, while soba wants little more than a chilled dipping sauce and a mound of grated ginger.
Seasonings pull it all together. Furikake over rice for breakfast. A pinch of shichimi togarashi on eggs. Toasted sesame stirred through spinach with a splash of soy. None of it is complicated. It's just what happens when good Japanese cooking ingredients are within arm's reach. Working through this collection is a straightforward way to build a Japanese grocery list from scratch: start with the Japanese staples above, then restock each one as you finish it. That's your pantry.
Get inspired with some recipes
Sticky Soy-Glazed Beef with Sesame Rice
A quick, glossy stir-fry-style beef dish with rich Japanese-inspired flavour. Perfect for a weekend dinner in under 30 minutes.
New Potatoes with Fresh Wasabi Butter
A simple seasonal side that turns humble new potatoes into something elegant and memorable.
Grilled Mackerel with Mikan Ponzu
A classic combination that lets the rich flavour of mackerel shine.