The No-Guilt Pleasure of Japanese Pudding

Even after visiting twice in six months, there are still so many aspects about Japan that I sorely miss:
The speed and efficiency of its bullet trains.
The reverence for ancient cultural traditions.
The civility and orderliness.
And most of all, the pudding.
Whether we had just gorged on a dinner of sushi or ramen or even a fine kaiseki, my husband and I could not pass a 7-Eleven there at the end of the night without stopping in to grab a small container of pudding in the refrigerator case.
Think the smoothest, silkiest flan with a layer of dark, bittersweet caramel.
For all of $1.50 U.S.
Is it any wonder that one taste left us immediately hooked on this pudding that’s known as purin?
Yearning for it back home, I came across a particular intriguing version of it: “Soy Sauce Pudding (Shoyu Purin)”
It’s from the new cookbook, “The Japanese Pantry” (Smith Street Books), of which I received a review copy.

It’s by Emiko Davies, an Australian-Japanese food writer and veteran cookbook author, who runs a cooking school and natural wine bar, Marilu, with her sommelier husband in San Miniato, Tuscany.
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