Difference between revisions of "Cook Edamame"

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Edamame, the grand soybean.  This delightful vegetable is commonly served at [[Practice Sushi Etiquette|sushi]] bars and [[Order In a Japanese Restaurant|Japanese]] and Chinese restaurants as a meal starter, an equivalent to the European bread basket. <br><br>
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Edamame, the grand soybean.  This delightful vegetable is commonly served at [[Practice Sushi Etiquette|sushi]] bars and [[Order In a Japanese Restaurant|Japanese]] and Chinese restaurants as a meal starter, an equivalent to the European bread basket.
 
In East Asia, the soybean has been used for over two thousand years as a major source of protein. Edamame is consumed as a snack, a vegetable dish, used in soups or processed into sweets. As a snack, the pods are lightly boiled in salted water, and then the seeds are squeezed directly from the pods into the mouth with the fingers.
 
In East Asia, the soybean has been used for over two thousand years as a major source of protein. Edamame is consumed as a snack, a vegetable dish, used in soups or processed into sweets. As a snack, the pods are lightly boiled in salted water, and then the seeds are squeezed directly from the pods into the mouth with the fingers.
 
[[Category:Japanese Dishes]]
 
[[Category:Japanese Dishes]]