From Season 8: Asian Take-Out at Home
Most of us have rarely given soy sauce a second thought, using it as a kind of liquid salt. But this 2,500-year-old ingredient, brewed first in China and since the seventh century in Japan, can offer nearly as much variety, complexity, and flavor as wine or olive oil, and it deserves serious consideration. In most supermarkets today, you will find a shelf of imported soy sauces, as well as American-brewed versions. How do they differ?
We decided to sample nationally available brands, choosing a lineup of 12 soy sauces, including both tamari and regular soy sauce, from Japan, China, and the United States. We tasted them three times: first plain, then with warm rice, and finally cooked in a teriyaki sauce with ginger, garlic, and mirin and brushed over broiled chicken thighs. As we tasted them, we noticed a wide range of colors and flavors, from reddish-brown, delicate, and floral to dark brown, pungent, and assertive. Where were these differences coming from? And how well did they play off the other flavors in a dish?
At its most basic, soy sauce is a fermented liquid made from soybeans and wheat. Soybeans contribute a strong, pungent taste, while wheat lends sweetness. Tamari is a type of soy sauce traditionally made with all soybeans and no wheat—though, confusingly, many tamaris do contain a little wheat. As a result, tamari has a more pungent flavor than soy sauce. Similarly, stronger, earthier Chinese soy sauce tends to be made with a lower proportion of wheat than the sweeter, lighter Japanese soy sauce.
Like many products with a long history, soy sauce is now made both artisanally using traditional methods and industrially using modern technology. All soy sauce begins with whole soybeans or defatted soy meal cooked and mixed with roasted grain, usually wheat (but sometimes barley or rice). This bean/grain mixture is inoculated with a mold called koji (technically, Aspergillus oryzae or Aspergillus soyae) and left for a few days to allow the mold to grow and spread. Then salt water and yeast are added to form a mash called moromi. And here comes the biggest difference in quality levels of soy sauce: The mash is fermented for anywhere from two days to four years. The brown liquid that is extruded from the mash is soy sauce, which is usually filtered, pasteurized, and bottled.
Experts claim that each soy sauce gets its particular flavor from the proportion and quality of the ingredients, including the local water where it's brewed, the koji "starter" mold (some companies brag of their proprietary koji, kept alive for centuries), the climate (a certain level of humidity is essential to make the mold grow), and the length of fermentation. Some industrially produced soy sauce starts with hydrolyzed vegetable protein (not necessarily soy) and may be sweetened with corn syrup and colored with caramel to mimic the flavor and color of fermented soy sauce.
Soy sauce is not all the same and, since we prefer simplicity in the test kitchen, we were hoping one clear winner would emerge from our tasting. No such luck. Our tasters liked one type of soy sauce for plain, uncooked applications and an entirely different one for cooked dishes. How about being able to say the best soy sauce is made in one particular country? Sorry: The tasters chose two different nations' products, depending on how it was used. Method of brewing? Again, they split between an artisanal soy and a mass-produced one (albeit one aged for months, not days). Would saltiness be the favored attribute? No, one had the least amount of salt of the 12 in our lineup, the other had the most. Clearly, these results underscored the fact that there's no "one-size-fits-all" soy sauce.
An important clue came when we tested lower-sodium (also called "light") soy sauces. (Lower-sodium soy sauces start as regular soy sauce, then some sodium is removed by filtering or ion exchange.) The lower-sodium soy sauces actually beat the regular soy sauces in a plain taste test but lost out in cooked applications. Why? Cutting down on the salt let some of the other flavors take the stage, leaving a delicate, complex soy taste in the foreground. But once cooked, the delicate flavors dissipated.
These delicate, nuanced flavors develop during the fermentation process. Generally, the longer the soy sauce ages, the more flavor it will develop—like wine. These flavorful esters are volatile, however and cook off when heated. In fact, if you cook soy sauce for any length of time you'll drive off the aroma-making it advisable to add more back at the end of cooking.
Our winning cooking soy sauce, with a more robust flavor that held up during the boiling and reduction of the teriyaki sauce, is higher in the nonvolatile flavor “Maillard” components. In the Maillard reaction, sugars and amino acids react to heat, causing browning and bringing about a richer, more savory flavor -- like searing meat before making pot roast. In fact, this sauce was the only soy sauce we tasted that had significant sugar content: two grams per tablespoon. Combine that sugar with a high salt content and the overall flavor profile of the dish is improved.
Our two winners also represent two very different manufacturing styles. Our cooking favorite is fermented for three to six months in 20-foot-tall fiberglass holding tanks. In contrast, our dipping favorite is unpasteurized, and is hand-stirred and fermented in sixty 150-year-old cedar kegs. The sauce is then double-fermented over an unusually long period, which produces a complex bouquet of aroma and flavor and mellows salt impact, making it preferable for dipping and non-cooking applications.
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| Product Tested | Price* | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Highly Recommended | |||
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Columela Extra Virgin Olive OilOur favorite premium extra-virgin olive oil from a previous tasting, Columela is composed of a blend of intense Picual, mild Hojiblanca, Ocal, and Arbequina olives. This oil took top honors for its fruity flavor and excellent balance. Tasters praised its big olive aroma, big olive taste with a buttery flavor that is sweet and full, with a peppery finish. One taster said: Its very green and freshlike a squeezed olive. Another simply wrote: Fantastic. |
$19 for 17 oz | |
| Recommended | |||
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Lucini Italia Premium Select Extra Virgin Olive OilTasters noted this oils flavor was much deeper than the other samples, describing it as fruity, with a slight peppery finish, buttery undertones, and a clean, green taste that was aromatic, with a good balance. It has the flavor that some good EVOOs have, said one admiring taster. |
$19.99 for 500 ml ($39.98 per liter) | |
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Colavita Extra Virgin Olive OilVirtually tied for second place, this oil was deemed round and buttery, with a light body and flavor that was briny and fruity, very fine and smooth, and almost herbal, with great balance. Good olive flavor. I could smell it and taste it, approved one taster. In a word, pleasant. |
$17.99 for 750 ml ($23.98 per liter) | |
| Recommended with Reservations | |||
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Bertolli Extra Virgin Olive OilA clear step down from the top oils, tasters noted overall mild flavor and very little aroma, with only a hint of green olive and a hint of spiciness at the end. In pasta, it was initially not complex, but gradually bloomed in your mouth. Overall, it was worthy of a second bite. |
$12.49 for 750 ml ($16.65 per liter) | |
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Filippo Berio Extra Virgin Olive OilWhile some tasters found this oil sweet and buttery with medium body and slight spice at the end, others complained that it had zero olive flavor and was so floral its almost like eating perfume; still others noted a bitter aftertaste. In pasta, it was extremely mild to the point of being boring. |
$10.99 for 750 ml ($14.65 per liter) | |
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Goya Extra Virgin Olive OilComments: The best comments tasters could muster were mild and neutral. Some liked it on pasta (though one called it Snoozeville), but complaints were myriad: metallic, soapy, briny, hints of dirt. Carped one taster, I cant imagine what is in here, but they have a nerve calling it EVOO. |
$13.99 for 1 liter | |
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Pompeian Extra Virgin Olive OilComments: While some tasters called this oil mild and smooth, others found it thin, greasy and not very interesting. I bet the cooking water had more olive flavor, speculated one taster; could be canolait is so bland, mused another. A few noted an objectionable aftertaste that was soapy, chemical or mentholthink |
$9.99 for 473 ml ($21.12 per liter) | |
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Botticelli Extra Virgin Olive OilWhile a few tasters liked this potent oil, others said they detected mushroom, rotten walnuts, a Band-Aid wrapped in a cherry blossom, and a quality that was downright medicinalTriaminic, anyone? Several deemed it overpowering and musky, with a rank, off-flavor. Tastes not like olives but like the armpits of olive laborers, shuddered one. |
$10.99 for 1 liter | |
| Not Recommended | |||
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Carapelli Extra Virgin Olive OilItaly, Greece, Spain, Tunisia, Turkey, Cyprus, Morocco, and Syria Comments: Nothing remarkable herejust greasy, no flavor, summarized one taster. Where did the olive go? said another. This oil was judged to have a kind of rancid aftertaste that was reminiscent of not only soil, tree resin, and ammonia and grass, but even kitty litter smells and a set of sweaty hockey pads. |
$10.99 for 750 ml ($14.65 per liter) | |
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DaVinci Extra Virgin Olive OilAlthough this oil won top place in a previous tasting, because olive oil is an agricultural product, it can differ from year to year. This time, tasters found it washed out and muted, if nice, in a totally bland and unremarkable way. Tasted plain, objections ranged from insipid, with no real complexity to tastes like EVOO mixed with vegetable oil. |
$17.99 for 1 liter | |
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Star Extra Virgin Olive OilOrigin: Spain, Italy, Greece, and Tunisia Comments: Boring and not very complex, this oil came across as plastic-y and industrial; some hint of olives, but it fades quickly. Tasters identified off-flavors that were unpleasant, dirty, like rubber and metal, with a sour aftertaste, or at least a bit funky, with a strange taste that was spicy, but in a motor oil kind of way. One simply wrote, Blech. |
$11.99 for 750 ml ($15.99 per liter) | |