Soy sauce

Soy sauce
A bottle of Japanese soy sauce
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese 1. 醬油
2. 荳油
3. 豉油
Simplified Chinese 1. 酱油
2. 豆油
3. 豉油
Burmese name
Burmese ပဲငံပြာရည်
IPA pɛ́ ŋàɴ byà yè
Vietnamese name
Quốc ngữ xì dầu or nước tương
Thai name
Thai ซีอิ๊ว (si-ew)
Korean name
Hangul 간장
Japanese name
Kanji 醤油
Hiragana しょうゆ
Filipino name
Tagalog toyo

Soy sauce (also called soya sauce[1]) is a condiment produced by fermenting soybeans with Aspergillus oryzae or Aspergillus sojae molds,[2] along with water and salt. After the fermentation, which yields fermented soybean paste, the paste is pressed, and two substances are obtained: a liquid, which is the soy sauce, and a cake of (wheat and) soy residue, the latter being usually reused as animal feed.[3] Most commonly, a grain is used together with the soybeans in the fermentation process, but not always.[4] Also, some varieties use roasted grain. Soy sauce is a traditional ingredient in East and Southeast Asian cuisines, where it is used in cooking and as a condiment. It originated in China 2,800 years ago and spread throughout Asia. In more recent times, it is also used in Western cuisine and prepared foods. All varieties of soy sauce are salty, earthy, brownish liquids intended to season food while cooking or at the table.

Contents

History

Soy sauce originated in China 2,800 years ago and its use later spread to East and Southeast Asia.[5] Like many salty condiments, soy sauce was probably originally a way to stretch salt, historically an expensive commodity. In Ancient China, fermented fish with salt was used as a condiment in which soybeans was included during the fermentation process. Eventually, this was replaced and the recipe for soy sauce, jiangyou (酱油), was created with soybeans as principal ingredient.[6]

Records of the Dutch East India Company list soy sauce as a commodity in 1737, when seventy-five large barrels were shipped from Dejima, Japan, to Batavia (present-day Jakarta) on the island of Java. Thirty-five barrels from that shipment were then shipped to the Netherlands.[7] In the 18th century, Isaac Titsingh published accounts of brewing soy sauce. Although earlier descriptions of soy sauce had been disseminated in the West, this was among the earliest to focus specifically on the brewing of the Japanese version.[8] By the mid-19th century, the Japanese soy sauce gradually disappeared from the European market, and soy sauce became synonymous with the Chinese product.[9] Europeans were unable to make soy sauce because they did not understand the function of Aspergillus oryzae, the fungus used in its brewing.[9]

One 19th century writer records that in China, the best soy sauce is "made by boiling beans soft, adding an equal quantity of wheat or barley, and leaving the mass to ferment; a portion of salt and three times as much water are afterwards put in, and the whole compound left for two or three months when the liquid is pressed and strained".[10]

Production

Soy sauce may be made either by fermentation or by hydrolysis; some commercial sauces contain a mixture of fermented and chemical sauces.

Traditional

Traditional soy sauces are made by mixing soybeans and grain with mold cultures such as Aspergillus oryzae and other related microorganisms and yeasts (the resulting mixture is called "koji" in Japan; the term "koji" is used both for the mixture of soybeans, wheat, and mold; as well as for only the mold). In older times, the mixture was then fermented naturally in giant urns and under the sun, which was believed to contribute additional flavors. Today, the mixture is generally placed in a temperature and humidity controlled incubation chamber.[11]

The production process of traditional soy sauces consists of several steps taking months to complete:

  1. Soaking and cooking: The soybeans soaked in water and boiled to completion. The wheat is roasted and crushed.
  2. Koji culturing: An equal amount of boiled soybeans and roasted wheat are mixed to form a grain mixture. A culture of Aspergillus spore is added to the grain mixture and mixed or the mixture is allowed to gather spores from the environment itself. The cultures include:
    • Aspergillus: a genus of fungus that is used for fermenting various ingredients (the cultures are called koji in Japanese). Three species are used for brewing soy sauce:
      • A. oryzae: Strains with high proteolytic capacity are used for brewing soy sauce.[12]
      • A. sojae: This fungus also has a high proteolytic capacity.
      • A. tamari: This fungus is used for brewing tamari.
    • Saccharomyces cerevisiae: the yeasts in the culture convert some of the sugars to ethanol which can undergo secondary reactions to produce other flavour compounds
    • Other microbes contained in the culture:
      • Bacillus spp.(genus): This organism is likely to grow soy sauce ingredients, bring to generate odors and ammonia.
      • Lactobacillus species: This organism produces a lactic acid increases the acidity in the feed.
  3. Brewing: The cultured grain mixture is mixed into a specific amount of salt brine and allowed to ferment. Over time, the Aspergillus mold on the soy and wheat break down the grain proteins into free amino acid and protein fragments and starches into simple sugars. This amino-glycosidic reaction gives soy sauce its dark brown colour. Lactic acid bacteria ferments the sugars into lactic acid and yeasts produces ethanol, which through aging and secondary fermentation produces numerous flavour compounds typical of soy sauce.
  4. Pressing: The fully fermented grain and brine slurry is placed into cloth-lined containers and pressed to separated the solids from the liquid soy sauce. The isolated solids are used as fertilizer or fed to animals while the liquid soy sauce is processed further.
  5. Pasteurization: The raw soy sauce is heated to eliminate any active yeasts and molds remaining in the soy sauce and can be filter to remove any fine particulates
  6. Storage: The soy sauce can be aged or directly bottled and sold.

Acid-hydrolyzed vegetable protein

Some brands of soy sauce are often made from acid-hydrolyzed soy protein instead of brewed with a traditional culture. This process may take only three days.[13] Although they have a different flavor, aroma, and texture when compared to brewed soy sauces, they have a longer shelf-life and are more commonly produced for this reason. Some people feel the hydrolyzed sauces taste better, but some prefer the naturally brewed varieties. The clear plastic packets of dark sauce common with Chinese-style take out food typically use a hydrolyzed vegetable protein formula. Some higher-quality hydrolyzed vegetable protein products with no added salt, sugar or colorings are sold as low-sodium soy sauce alternatives called "liquid aminos" in health food stores, similar to the way salt substitutes are used. These products are, however not necessarily low in sodium.

Carcinogens may form during the manufacture of chemical sauce.[14]

Types

Soy sauce is widely used as a particularly important flavoring and has been integrated into the traditional cuisines of many East Asian and Southeast Asian cultures. Despite their rather similar appearance, soy sauces produced in different cultures and regions are different in taste, consistency, fragrance and saltiness. Soy sauce retains its quality longer when kept away from direct sunlight.

Chinese

Chinese soy sauce, jiangyou (simpl.: 酱油 / trad.: 醬油) or chiyou (豉油), is primarily made from soybeans, with relatively low amounts of other grains. Chinese soy sauce can be roughly split into two classes which can be brewed or a blended.

Brewed

Soy sauce that have been brewed directly from a fermentation process using wheat, soybeans, salt, and water without additional additives.

Blended

Additives with sweet or umami tastes are sometimes added to a finished brewed soy sauce to modify its taste and texture.

Japanese

Buddhist monks from China introduced soy sauce into Japan in the 7th century,[16] where it is known as shōyu (醤油 shōyu?).[17][18] The Japanese word tamari is derived from the verb tamaru (溜る?) that signifies "to accumulate", referring to the fact that tamari was traditionally a liquid byproduct produced during the fermentation of miso (type of seasoning). Japan is the leading producer of tamari.

Shōyu is traditionally divided into five main categories depending on differences in their ingredients and method of production. Most, but not all Japanese soy sauces include wheat as a primary ingredient, which tends to give them a slightly sweeter taste than their Chinese counterparts. They also tend towards an alcoholic sherry-like flavor, sometimes enhanced by the addition of small amounts of alcohol as a natural preservative. The widely varying flavors of these soy sauces are not always interchangeable, some recipes only call for one type or the other, much like a white wine cannot replace a red's flavor or beef stock does not produce the same results as fish stock.

Some soy sauces made in the Japanese way or styled after them contain about fifty percent wheat.

Soy sauce has a distinct basic taste called umami (旨味?, "pleasant savory taste") in Japanese, due to naturally occurring free glutamates. Umami was identified as a basic taste in 1908 by Kikunae Ikeda of the Tokyo Imperial University.

Varieties

Newer varieties of Japanese soy sauce include:[19]

All of these varieties are sold in the marketplace in three different grades according to how they were produced:

All the varieties and grades may be sold according to three official levels of quality:[20]

Soy sauce is also commonly known as shōyu in Hawaii.

Indonesian

In Indonesia, soy sauce is known as kecap (also ketjap or kecap), which is a catch-all term for fermented sauces, and cognate to the English word "ketchup".[21] Three common varieties of Indonesian soy-based kecap exist:

Kecap asin 
Salty soy sauce, which is very similar to Chinese light soy sauce, but usually somewhat thicker and has a stronger flavor; it can be replaced by light Chinese soy sauce in recipes.
Kecap manis 
Sweet soy sauce, which has a thick, almost syrupy consistency and a pronounced sweet, treacle-like flavor due to generous addition of palm sugar. In cooking, it may be replaced by molasses with a little vegetable stock stirred in.
Kecap manis sedang 
Medium sweet soy sauce, which has a less thick consistency and a more saline taste than Manis.

Korean

Korean soy sauce, (called Joseon ganjang, 조선간장, in Korean) is a byproduct of the production of doenjang (Korean fermented soybean paste). They are mainly used in making soups, seasoning, and dip sauce. Joseon ganjang, thin and dark brown in color, is made entirely of soy and brine, and has a saltiness that varies according to the producer. Wide scale use of Joseon ganjang has been somewhat superseded by cheaper factory-made Japanese style soy sauce, called waeganjang (hangul: 왜간장/和: 간장). According to the 2001 national food consumption survey in Korea, traditional fermented ganjang comprised only 1.4% of soy sauce purchases.[22]

Burmese or Myanmar

Burma is a country with a high production of soy bean. Pickled bean curds (se-tou-fu), made from soy beans and usually more spicy than those in the neighbouring countries, is one of the staples in Myanmar. Export of bean is upwards of hundred tons a year. The Burmese soy sauce production dated back to the Bagan era in the 9th and 10th century. Scripts written in praise of pe ngan byar yay (ပဲငံပြာရည်, literally "bean fish sauce") were found. Production increased to its heights during the Konbaung dynasty, circa 1700, when there was a bolstered migration of ethnic groups from the north to boost and modify the production of silk in Amarapura. Thick soy sauce is called kya nyo (ကြာညို့, from Chinese jiangyou 醬油).

Philippine

A soy sauce-based product popular in the Philippines is called toyo, usually found alongside other sauces such as fish sauce (patis) and sugar cane vinegar (suka). The flavor of Philippine soy sauce is a combination of ingredients made from soybeans, wheat, salt, and caramel, is interestingly milder compared to its other Asian counterparts—possibly an adaptation to the demands of the Filipino palate and its cuisine. It is thinner in texture and has a saltier taste compared to its Southeast Asian counterparts, much more similar to the Japanese shōyu. It is used as a staple condiment to flavor many cooked dishes and as a marinade during cooking, it is also a table condiment. It is usually mixed and served with calamansi (the combination is known as toyomansi), a small Asian citrus-lime.

Singapore and Malaysian

In Mandarin Chinese spoken in Malaysia and Singapore, soy sauce in general is refer as dòuyóu (豆油), a Mandarin transliteration of the Hokkien term for the sauce or jiàngyóu (醬油); light soy sauce is jiàngqīng (醬清). Angmo daoiu (紅毛豆油, lit. "foreigners' soy sauce") is the Hokkien name for Worcestershire sauce.

Malays from Malaysia, using the Malay dialect similar to Indonesian, use the word kicap for soy sauce. Kicap is traditionally of two types: kicap lemak (lit "fat/rich soy sauce") and kicap cair. Kicap lemak is similar to Indonesian kecap manis but with very much less sugar while kicap cair is the Malaysian equivalent of kecap asin.

Taiwanese

The history of soy sauce making in Taiwan can be traced back to southeastern China, in the provinces of Fujian and Guangdong. Taiwanese soy sauce is known for its black bean variant, known as black bean soy sauce (黑豆蔭油), which takes longer to produce (about 6 months). Most major soy sauce makers in Taiwan, such as Kimlan (金蘭), Wan Ja Shan (萬家香), and President-Kikkoman (統萬), produce soy sauce made from soybeans and wheat. A few other makers, such as Wuan Chuang (丸莊), O'Long (黑龍), Tatung (大同) and Ruei Chun (瑞春) make black bean soy sauce.[23]

Vietnamese

In Vietnam, Chinese-style soy sauce is called xì dầu (derived from the Cantonese name 豉油) or nước tương. The term "soy sauce" could also imply other condiments and soy bean paste with thick consistency known as tương. Both are used mostly as a seasoning or dipping sauce for a number of dishes. Vietnamese cuisine itself favors fish sauce in cooking but nước tương has a clear presence in vegetarian cooking.

Nutrition

A study by the National University of Singapore showed that Chinese dark soy sauce contains 10 times the antioxidants of red wine, and can help prevent cardiovascular diseases.[24] (However, it is unlikely to be used in nearly as great a quantity as wine.) Soy sauce is rich in lactic acid bacteria and of excellent anti-allergic potential.[25][26]

Soy sauce contains ethyl carbamate.

Soy sauce does not contain a level of the beneficial isoflavones associated with other soy products such as tofu or edamame.[27] It can also be very salty, having a salt content of between 14%–18%. Low-sodium soy sauces are produced, but it is difficult to make soy sauce without using some quantity of salt as an antimicrobial agent.[28]

100ml of soy sauce contains the following nutritional information according to the USDA:

Allergies

Most varieties of soy sauce contain wheat, to which some people have a medical intolerance.[29] However, some naturally brewed soy sauces made with wheat may be tolerated by people with a specific intolerance to gluten because gluten is not detectable in the finished product.[30] Japanese tamari soy sauce is traditionally wheat-free, and some tamari available commercially today is wheat- and gluten-free. Kikkoman now make a gluten free soy sauce using rice flour instead of wheat.[31]

Carcinogens

A 2001 test of various soy sauces and related products by the United Kingdom Food Standards Agency (FSA) found that 22 out of 100 samples contained a substance called 3-MCPD (3-monochloropropane-1,2-diol) at levels considerably higher than those deemed safe by the European Union.[32] About two-thirds of the 22 samples also contained a second chemical called 1,3-DCP (1,3-dichloropropane-2-ol), which experts advise should not be present at any levels in food. Both chemicals are carcinogenic, and 1,3-DCP can cause genetic damage to be passed on to offspring who never consumed the sauces.[33] The FSA recommended that the affected products be withdrawn,[34] and in June 2001 issued a Public Health Advice leaflet[35] warning against a small number of soy sauce products that were found to contain high levels of potentially cancer-causing chemicals. The leaflet singled out brands and products (some by batch numbers) imported from Thailand, China, Hong Kong and Taiwan. Although the leaflet primarily looked at soy sauce, it also included oyster sauce, marinades and other types of sauces, that affected the brands Golden Mountain, King Imperial, Pearl River Bridge, Jammy Chai, Lee Kum Kee, Golden Mark, Kimlan, Golden Swan, Sinsin and Tung Chun. Despite these being small in number in the UK, they are the dominant brands in their respective nations.

In Vietnam, 3-MCPD was found in toxic levels (In 2004 the HCM City Institute of Hygiene and Public Health found 33 of 41 sample of soya sauce with high rates of 3-MCPD, including six samples with 11,000 to 18,000 times more 3-MPCD than permitted, compared to about 5,000 times in 2001)[36] in soy sauces there in 2007, along with formaldehyde in the national dish Pho, and banned pesticides in vegetables and fruits. The newspaper Thanh Nien Daily commented: "Health agencies have known that Vietnamese soy sauce, the country's second most popular sauce after fish sauce, has been chock-full of cancer agents since at least 2001."[37]

See also


Notes

  1. ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/luxurynutandseedloaf_8883
  2. ^ 'Microbiology Laboratory Theory and Application.' Michael Leboffe and Burton Pierce, 2nd edition. pp.317
  3. ^ How it's Made
  4. ^ Common soy sauce preparation
  5. ^ Tanaka, Norio. "Shōyu: The Flavor of Japan," The Japan Foundation Newsletter Vol. XXVII, No. 2 (January 2000), p. 2.
  6. ^ Kurlansky, Mark (2002). Salt: A world history. New York: Walker and Co.. p. 20. ISBN 9780802713735. http://books.google.com/books?id=kK7ec92n5x8C. 
  7. ^ Tanaka, p. 6.
  8. ^ Titsingh, Isaac. (1781). "Bereiding van de Soya" ("Producing Soy Sauce"), Verhandelingen van het Bataviaasch Genootschap (Transactions of the Batavian Academy), Vol. III. OCLC 9752305
  9. ^ a b Tanaka, p. 7.
  10. ^ The Middle Kingdom: A Survey of the Geography, Government, Education, Social Life, Arts, Religion, &c. of the Chinese Empire and Its Inhabitants, 2 vol. (Wiley & Putnam, 1848)
  11. ^ Muro
  12. ^ Maheshwari, D.K.; Dubey, R.C.; Saravanamuthu, R. (2010). Industrial exploitation of microorganisms. New Delhi: I.K. International Pub. House. p. 242. ISBN 9789380026534. 
  13. ^ "Korean Restaurant Guide article on soy sauce". Koreanrestaurantguide.com. http://www.koreanrestaurantguide.com/health/health_soy.htm. Retrieved 2010-07-16. 
  14. ^ "1,3-DCP in soy sauce and related products - your questions answered". UK Food Standards Agency. February 2001. http://www.food.gov.uk/multimedia/webpage/13dcpsoy/. Retrieved July 2010. 
  15. ^ jzqu20519, 咱へ故鄉 丸莊醬油, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D-jhtA5AVls 
  16. ^ Wilson, Kathy (2010). Biotechnology and genetic engineering. New York: Facts on File. pp. 90. ISBN 9780816077847. http://books.google.com/books?id=GwpsVDKQcSUC. 
  17. ^ "Shoyu". Dictionary.com. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/shoyu. 
  18. ^ "shoyu". Merriam-webster's Online Dictionary. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/shoyu. 
  19. ^ Steinkraus, Keith H., ed (2004). Industrialization of indigenous fermented foods (Second ed.). Marcel Dekker. p. 22. ISBN 0-8247-4784-4. http://books.google.com/?id=WfjPq9dfTuMC&pg=PA22&dq=genen+usujio&q=genen%20usujio. 
  20. ^ Wood, Brian J. B., ed (1998). Microbiology of fermented foods. 1 (Second ed.). Blackie academic & professional. p. 364. ISBN 0-7514-0216-8. http://books.google.com/?id=mKfpPwm5ceEC&pg=PA364. 
  21. ^ See discussion and references at Wiktionary: ketchup.
  22. ^ Jung, Soon Teck and Kang, Seong-Gook (2002). "The Past and Present of Traditional Fermented Foods in Korea". http://www.miyajima-soy.co.jp/science/kouenkai/kouenkai.htm. Retrieved 7 January 2008. 
  23. ^ Chung, Oscar (January 1, 2010). "A Sauce for All". Taiwan Review (Government Information Office, Republic of China (Taiwan)). http://taiwanreview.nat.gov.tw/ct.asp?xitem=83076&ctnode=1337. Retrieved November 14, 2010. 
  24. ^ Daniells, Stephen (6 June 2006). "Antioxidant-rich soy sauce could protect against CVD". nutraingredients.com. http://www.nutraingredients.com/news/ng.asp?id=68196-soy-sauce-cvd-isoflavones. Retrieved 7 January 2008. 
  25. ^ Tanasupawat, Somboon et al. (18 June 2002). "Lactic acid bacteria isolated from soy sauce mash in Thailand". Journal of General and Applied Microbiology (The Microbiology Research Foundation) 48 (4): 201–209. doi:10.2323/jgam.48.201. PMID 12469319. 
  26. ^ Kobayashi, Makio (18 April 2005). "Immunological Functions of Soy Sauce: Hypoallergenicity and Antiallergic Activity of Soy Sauce". Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering (Society for Biotechnology, Japan) 1 (2): 144–151. doi:10.1263/jbb.100.144. PMID 16198255. 
  27. ^ Shahidi, Fereidoon; Naczk, Marian (2003). Phenolics in food and nutraceuticals, Edition 2. Florence, Kentucky: CRC Press. p. 103. ISBN 1587161389. http://books.google.com/?id=vHOJKw4umikC 
  28. ^ Hutkins, Robert Wayne (2006). Microbiology and technology of fermented foods. Blackwell publishing. ISBN 0-8138-0018-8. http://books.google.com/?id=Nc77BH65_EcC&pg=PT441#v=onepage&q=. 
  29. ^ [1]
  30. ^ "Does soy sauce contain gluten?". Soya.be. http://www.soya.be/gluten-free-soy-sauce.php. Retrieved 2010-07-16. 
  31. ^ "Gluten-Free Soy Sauce". http://www.kikkomanusa.com/homecooks/products/products_hc_details.php?pf=10106&fam=101. Retrieved 2011-05-25. 
  32. ^ "Survey of 3-Monochloropropane-1,2-Diol (3-MCPD) in Soy Sauce and Related Products (Number 14/01)". Food Standards Agency. 2001-06-18. http://www.food.gov.uk/science/surveillance/fsis2001/3-mcpdsoy. Retrieved 2010-07-16. 
  33. ^ by Junelyn S. de la Rosa (2010-04-04). "barchronicle (Philippine government)". Bar.gov.ph. http://www.bar.gov.ph/barchronicle/2004/may04_1-31_soysauce.asp. Retrieved 2010-07-16. 
  34. ^ Food Standards Agency (20 June 2001). "Some Soy Sauce Products To Be Removed" (Press release). Food Standards Agency. http://www.food.gov.uk/news/pressreleases/2001/jun/soysaucerecall. Retrieved 7 January 2008. 
  35. ^ UK UK Food Standards Agency: Soy advice leaflet.
  36. ^ VIETNAMNET, Ha Noi, Viet nam. "Soya sauce stirs worry and discontentment among public". English.vietnamnet.vn. http://english.vietnamnet.vn/reports/2007/05/699774/. Retrieved 2010-07-16. 
  37. ^ (AFP) (2007-09-11). "Toxic soy sauce, chemical veggies — food scares hit Vietnam". Afp.google.com. http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5iiMrrBvLTLGX3P0uXmSqeT1Zjayw. Retrieved 2010-07-16. 

References