'Red cow peas' is the English version of the Indian name and you can usually get these beans in Indian stores (at least in the UK). Thanks for all the doable, delicious recipes, Taiji.
Wow, you washed that so much im amazed there was anything left! Thank you for sharing, I didn't know there was a difference but now i want to try to make both.
Thank you for sharing this red beans recipe. I can put ice and condensed milk, and it's yummy as dessert. It can be used as a filling for Red Mungo Bean Moshi. Yum 😋 yummy. 😋
I saw a video yesterday in which an elderly Japanese woman made kosumochi. But I didn’t know what the red paste she was making was called. I was fascinated watching her make it. I am so glad I found your video. I’m going to have to use a translator to figure out what the sugar package says, though. 😄
You can basically use any type of sugar. He used cane sugar, but any other type of sugar works too. But keep in mind that the browner the sugar is, the more it has a slight caramell taste to it.
I’m actually currently letting my Koshi-an sink to the bottom of the bowl right now. It has taken me a very long time because my sieve was tiny and starting to break😅 but here I am finally. I’m going to be trying to make some daifuku mochi tomorrow with my sister and little nephews. I’ll let you know how it goes!
I discovered your channel just a couple of days ago and am really enjoying your content. :) Thank you for this in-depth tutorial on how to make anko. I tried the coarser tsubu-an and really enjoyed it.
Thanks for your video. Very informative and very direct straight to the point. Now I know how to make azuki beans in two different ways. Thank you I will try to make ampan. In our language which is Palauan Language is called Abrabang.
Hey thanx so much for your comment! it makes me so happy to hear that you enjoy my videos!! hahaha, exactly such videos are coming up next!! (work in progress)
Wholly crap, that’s a lengthy process. We here at the western took it for granted with accessibility to food processor. Thank you for showing the labor of love
I've been trying to eat healthier and I love Asian food and I ran across red bean paste recipes before however you got into so much more detail and I humbly respect that thank you so much for sharing I have Asian shop at my Walmart local shopping plaza and every now and then I shop in there I'm definitely going to try this recipe I like the smoother one like you do I am so anxious to give this a try I will try both recipes like you stated however the smoother red bean paste for me that would probably be my go-to and I will be making larger batches because like I said I'm trying to eat healthier and to me Asian food Japanese food is the healthiest way to go I love my vegetable so this would work out well for me and less sugary sweetz like America has I find this to be a most healthier choice now what I need to learn is how to make the pastry that you used to make the bean paste desserts I find that I would rather have I guess it's the more cakey like when not the do we want to wear it stretches a whole lot I seen a young lady she has her she's a TH-camr Rina and she says that this is one of her favourites I've already bought the fish mold from Amazon so I can do it more so authentically and I also want to try it and around 4 because it's pretty I seen some with sesame seed and they were deep-frying it a little so I'm anxious to try I know you just read my big book but LOL thank you so much for sharing and you made it sound so easy and I love your sense of humor again thank you and Continue To Stay Safe Healthy Strong and Happy Many Blessings and Much Love-n-Peace 💜☮️💯😇🙏🏾💙❣️
It was interesting following the instructions but many thanks! It was perfect for my sesame balls and mochi as none of my stores had red bean paste while amazon couldn’t ship it to me 😂 now i got tons of homemade finally thanks to you!!! Also i used normal red beans 😅
Thanks for making this video!! I can't wait to try and make anko 😋 Just got back home from Japan and I always miss anko sweets when I get back! So, you don't need to soak the azuki beans before you start boiling them? Thanks!! All the best
I love those. Just be cautious, the first boil might cause joint pains/ inflammation when you drink it. That is why it is recommended to throw away the first boil.
@@taijiskitchen It was perfect. It's better to give more detail and take the time it takes then rush it and leave people confused. You are doing great :D Now will you teach us more sweet recipe to use it in? :P
I absolutely hate beans but since I don't eat meat my doctor told me i must eat beans 💀 so here's my attempt to turn them into something I actually enjoy. since I'm a big dessert enthusiast hopefully this will be the answer to my problem lol. thank you for the very useful video!
That idea of the charming smile after you tie kimono comes from yourself or a suggestion from someone else? It sets me in the best mood watching your video^_^
That ocean scene at the beginning looks like the opening to final fantasy 8
3 หลายเดือนก่อน
Can you tell me if I soak the beans so they cook faster, will it affect the appearance of the dessert? Congratulations on the video, I really liked it!
Hello Taiji, just brought some adzuki beans online. I am going to try and follow your recipe because i am going to make this for Father's Day, i have one question though, can i soak the beans first to cut the cooking time? Or is it going to affect the Tsubu-an and Koshi-an i am going to make
no it is better not to soak in water bc; 1. the skin of the beans is very bitter and therefore need to throw away the first boiling water 2. but the inside will be too soft and will lose its flavor when boiled (this will be thrown away, if you boil with the soaked beans) good question, should have answered it in the video.
the Tsubu-An I made with your receipe was great and for the Koshi-An Howww man :o , the texture is soo elegant as you said it fells like walking on snow :D ! amazinggg thank you bro
Can you add different flavors like chocolate or coconut or vanilla to it and what is the difference between the more smoother one and the more thicker one and again can you add different flavors would you add different flavors is this like a bean pudding
hi! anko is usually eaten with other foods or used as a filling in pastries such as steamed buns, mochi etc. the texture is really only for preference, so it doesn’t matter if you make it chunky or smooth. :)
Hi Taiji. I’m wondering if a syphon might give you a better result for draining the water from the settled bean paste. In case you are unfamiliar with the idea, any flexible hose can be used. The water flows by gravity. The bowl of bean paste with the separated water level must be physically higher than the draining end of the tube. So the draining end can simply go into the sink. To begin, coil the hose and immerse in the water so no air bubbles are in the hose. You can even do this in a separate pan of water next to the paste bowl. Place your thumbs over each end of the tube and move one end of the tube into the water level of the bean paste bowl. Remove your thumbs from the two ends of the tube and the water will flow directly into the sink. Keep the suction end of the tube above the level of the paste. This will give you much more control over the separation process without disturbing the paste. It’s a kind of meditation. Maybe practice once or twice with just water so you get a feel for the process.
Hah. Hi power blender? Stick blender? Food processor? I can't pronounce the Japanes names, anyway. In Indian food they just peel the beans before they cook them and call it dahl. Seems easier than sieving and rinsing to Koshi-an. I once made some sweets with adzuki beans and sugar and agar agar many years ago from a recipe I found. I barely remember, but it tasted pretty good and it all got eaten.
Next time do the following. 1. But Cardamom and grind just the seeds and add it with the sugar while boiling. You will feel the taste developed. 2. The one your father likes it is good for you. It has more fiber and your guts absorb the nutrients faster. 3. Try adding little bit of lime juice to balance sweetness and acidity. Trust me on this. 4. For the smoother version, I recommend you add dried orange peel . Play around with spices like nutmeg, mace, cinnamon. Enjoy the different version. I hope you enjoy the different taste!
I only have "flor de mayo" mexican beans.... but I'll try it anyways. Let's see how it turns out. Ok, here's my experience: taste and texture were good (made the koshi-an variation), color is plain brown instead or reddish, cooking time probably 4 times more so next time I'll definitely use pressure pan.
I have a question about tanginess, in the 2nd part of your video, where you rinse the smooth paste a few times to remove tanginess, but now I do wonder, with the more rough been paste, we skip that step 😃 Does the first batch taste tangy? Can we rinse the rough paste? 😂
Could you preasure cook the beans after the first 10 minutes? I feel like it would be faster and you wouldn't have to watch it for an hour to keep it in water.
Just out of curiosity, why can't you use a mixer to break the skin and use a cloth to do the sifting for koshi-an? That could save a lot of work! I think it's cheaper to just buy the anko than going through this much work~
Tried the long koshi-an but I think I added too much water when I started boiling it because I had to boil and stir for a loooong time. Also, it didn't change color and didn't become smoother like the one in the video.
Back after a little experimenting. If you see that the paste doesn't change color and texture, and when it dries turns back into powder form, it needs more sugar.
Is this paste could be a basic for other dishes? I mean smth else than sweets. I Got only black beans at the moment :(. Thank you for the japanses tradition culture content as well
i have never seen Anko paste used in other dishes other than sweets, but the Azuki beans are sometimes used in some other salty dishes, Sekihan (cooked with rice) or cooked with pumpkin. you are welcome and thanx for your comment!!
I know I am a perfect cooker but he way too perfect than me. He way too much detail and these bean look really good. I bet it take him the whole day to finish cooking
oh cool! well not really, either make more Anko from Azuki and add to it, or wash half or quarter so of the Anko with water and then mix to the unwashed, although with this it will lose some flavor (unless it is Koshian).
I'd buy ready made TUSBUAN in package and heat it with added water to the density of soup. Boila you have perfect ZENNZAI. Of course you need some plain TOASTED MOCHI in ZENZAI.
They are very different. Kidney beans are twice maybe 3x bigger than Azuki beans. Even though you can make ANKO from most any beans and are in many WAGASHI (Japanese sweets) hence you see different color ANKO inside some Wagashi.
As someone who speaks American English, we would say the water "evaporates" while cooking rather than the water "vaporizes." It's the same thing, but "evaporate" feels more accurate.
oh, thanx so much for your correction! I actually learned American English, since I live in the US for total of 8 years, but since I have been away for so long, I have forgotten many things, so it is super helpful to get such insights!!
Actually Kasy, vaporize and evaporate are synonyms. They are completely interchangeable in “American English”. But in terms of nuanced meaning, vaporizing has a sense of being the consequence of some action taken, like boiling. Evaporation has more of a sense a passive change of state, like transitioning from solid to liquid to gas (water vapor) when ice melts.
No I'm with u....I had sweet bean paste 1 time and became completely obsessed....years later I found adzuki beans and bought 5 pounds 😂 I'm making some now cuz my 12 year old loves it SOOO much that we will literally BATTLE over the last sweet bean bun
OOOOO NOOOOO Man! You are wasting nutritious part of the food. Why are you doing all that just to get the fine part of the beans? what a huge disaster. Honestly!!
I know what you mean and I usually don't like to throw away good food. but in order to make quality Koshi-an you need to do this, I put the skin in the compost. but of course you don't want to throw away the skin, then Tsubu-an is the right option for you! thats why I showed both variations! thanx for your concern!!
'Red cow peas' is the English version of the Indian name and you can usually get these beans in Indian stores (at least in the UK). Thanks for all the doable, delicious recipes, Taiji.
@@ydlog rajma is not red cow peas
Can you get the split peeled dahl version of adzuki beans? And what is it called?
🐮
Wow, you washed that so much im amazed there was anything left! Thank you for sharing, I didn't know there was a difference but now i want to try to make both.
Thank you for sharing this red beans recipe. I can put ice and condensed milk, and it's yummy as dessert. It can be used as a filling for Red Mungo Bean Moshi. Yum 😋 yummy. 😋
This is a comment for all of your videos - Thank you! I am enjoying them and learning a lot! I’ve tried your recipes with delicious success!
I really like it when you show rugby, chess, umbrella and beach to help us understand what you’re thinking about the ingredients
I saw a video yesterday in which an elderly Japanese woman made kosumochi. But I didn’t know what the red paste she was making was called. I was fascinated watching her make it. I am so glad I found your video. I’m going to have to use a translator to figure out what the sugar package says, though. 😄
It just is a brand most likely, any sugar will sweeten it, I am only a year late ;)
You can basically use any type of sugar. He used cane sugar, but any other type of sugar works too. But keep in mind that the browner the sugar is, the more it has a slight caramell taste to it.
I’m actually currently letting my Koshi-an sink to the bottom of the bowl right now. It has taken me a very long time because my sieve was tiny and starting to break😅 but here I am finally. I’m going to be trying to make some daifuku mochi tomorrow with my sister and little nephews. I’ll let you know how it goes!
Forgot to say this before. It turned out AMAZING! Fantastic recipe. So delicious.
I'm glad to hear that western children also enjoy this!
@@rahhmennoodles338 i mean just because we are white doesn't mean we can't enjoy other countries treats
I discovered your channel just a couple of days ago and am really enjoying your content. :) Thank you for this in-depth tutorial on how to make anko. I tried the coarser tsubu-an and really enjoyed it.
The fine bean paste would be my choice, in a fluffy white steamed sweet bun would suit me. Elegant!
Dude I am starting the home cook path and coming across your channel was just great. Cool content, keep it up!
Thanx! up next are the some sweets using Anko!
stay tuned!
This recipe is BOMB🔥🔥🔥🇯🇵! Thank you so much i love this it turned out exactly how you did😄
Thank you so much for your guidance, with other recipes I was confused but your video editing is perfect!!!!!
Thanks for your video. Very informative and very direct straight to the point. Now I know how to make azuki beans in two different ways. Thank you I will try to make ampan. In our language which is Palauan Language is called Abrabang.
Tsubu-An = Practical, less complicated, less waste, more beans
Koshi-An = Tedious, more waste, less beans (skin), jam-like
Thank u so much!! I'm gonna try it!! ❤️ I love ur channel, could you please create a video with a recipe for a dessert with it? Doumo 🙏
Hey thanx so much for your comment! it makes me so happy to hear that you enjoy my videos!!
hahaha, exactly such videos are coming up next!! (work in progress)
Just made it so I can bake some Anpan
Really easy to follow recipe and it turned out great
Wholly crap, that’s a lengthy process. We here at the western took it for granted with accessibility to food processor. Thank you for showing the labor of love
I've been trying to eat healthier and I love Asian food and I ran across red bean paste recipes before however you got into so much more detail and I humbly respect that thank you so much for sharing I have Asian shop at my Walmart local shopping plaza and every now and then I shop in there I'm definitely going to try this recipe I like the smoother one like you do I am so anxious to give this a try I will try both recipes like you stated however the smoother red bean paste for me that would probably be my go-to and I will be making larger batches because like I said I'm trying to eat healthier and to me Asian food Japanese food is the healthiest way to go I love my vegetable so this would work out well for me and less sugary sweetz like America has I find this to be a most healthier choice now what I need to learn is how to make the pastry that you used to make the bean paste desserts I find that I would rather have I guess it's the more cakey like when not the do we want to wear it stretches a whole lot I seen a young lady she has her she's a TH-camr Rina and she says that this is one of her favourites I've already bought the fish mold from Amazon so I can do it more so authentically and I also want to try it and around 4 because it's pretty I seen some with sesame seed and they were deep-frying it a little so I'm anxious to try I know you just read my big book but LOL thank you so much for sharing and you made it sound so easy and I love your sense of humor again thank you and Continue To Stay Safe Healthy Strong and Happy Many Blessings and Much Love-n-Peace 💜☮️💯😇🙏🏾💙❣️
It was interesting following the instructions but many thanks! It was perfect for my sesame balls and mochi as none of my stores had red bean paste while amazon couldn’t ship it to me 😂 now i got tons of homemade finally thanks to you!!! Also i used normal red beans 😅
Thanks for making this video!! I can't wait to try and make anko 😋 Just got back home from Japan and I always miss anko sweets when I get back! So, you don't need to soak the azuki beans before you start boiling them? Thanks!! All the best
I like manju sweet so much! Each time I go to a Japanese market, I buy it 😋
I'm going to make this with less sugar as you suggested!
Sarap ng gawa mong salad na beans, enjoy po
I love those. Just be cautious, the first boil might cause joint pains/ inflammation when you drink it. That is why it is recommended to throw away the first boil.
Thank you for another awesome video :D
you are welcome!!
it got a lot longer than I have expected... hope its not too long of a video!
@@taijiskitchen It was perfect. It's better to give more detail and take the time it takes then rush it and leave people confused. You are doing great :D Now will you teach us more sweet recipe to use it in? :P
I absolutely hate beans but since I don't eat meat my doctor told me i must eat beans 💀 so here's my attempt to turn them into something I actually enjoy. since I'm a big dessert enthusiast hopefully this will be the answer to my problem lol. thank you for the very useful video!
for Koshi An, why not soak the bean until it skin separates from the been and discarded before cooking?
Loving your content!
Thank you very much for the knowledge.
Looks yummy
Thank you, from Wilmington, north Carolina.,
Very nice receipe thanks
Meine Frau hat vor über einem Jahr zwei Packungen Bohnen gekauft
Endlich weiß ich wie ich sie verbrauchen kann
Danke
gerne! hoffentlich wird es euch schmecken!
aber die sind schon "Azuki Bohnen", gell?
Ja genau azukibohnen
thank you for sharing this to the world.
I'm learning a lot from your vlog,thank you!
Wow such much work for koshi-an😮
So helpful!!!!! Doumo arigato gozaimasu!! 🙏🙏🙏🙇🏻♂️🙇🏻♂️🙇🏻♂️🙌🙌🙌
thx i threw way too many azuki beans into a pot so very helpful to learn while i go xD
Thanks sensei! Please teach us more in thr future! Can you teach us how to make Nekiri and other Japanese sweets too? Thanks
i make something very similar to ur recipe but whit regular red beans but in a slightly different process
I love my long-handled wooden spoons to distance my hands from splatters and the heat of the flame on the stove.
Absolutely love the rugby vs chess example 🤣
That idea of the charming smile after you tie kimono comes from yourself or a suggestion from someone else? It sets me in the best mood watching your video^_^
Im so glad I came across your channel 😊
great to hear!
thank you too!
Wow 👌 really good 😋👍
Thanx so much!!
That ocean scene at the beginning looks like the opening to final fantasy 8
Can you tell me if I soak the beans so they cook faster, will it affect the appearance of the dessert? Congratulations on the video, I really liked it!
Sir thnak you
Hello Taiji, just brought some adzuki beans online. I am going to try and follow your recipe because i am going to make this for Father's Day, i have one question though, can i soak the beans first to cut the cooking time? Or is it going to affect the Tsubu-an and Koshi-an i am going to make
no it is better not to soak in water bc;
1. the skin of the beans is very bitter and therefore need to throw away the first boiling water
2. but the inside will be too soft and will lose its flavor when boiled (this will be thrown away, if you boil with the soaked beans)
good question, should have answered it in the video.
Yet another awesome video! Thanks Taiji (((:
you are welcome!
thank YOU for your comment!!
Cant wait to try 😀
The ozuki tea is surprisly tasty :D nice tips
the Tsubu-An I made with your receipe was great and for the Koshi-An Howww man :o , the texture is soo elegant as you said it fells like walking on snow :D ! amazinggg thank you bro
I love your vidio Thank you🙏
Amazing
Can you add different flavors like chocolate or coconut or vanilla to it and what is the difference between the more smoother one and the more thicker one and again can you add different flavors would you add different flavors is this like a bean pudding
hi! anko is usually eaten with other foods or used as a filling in pastries such as steamed buns, mochi etc. the texture is really only for preference, so it doesn’t matter if you make it chunky or smooth. :)
Hi Taiji.
I’m wondering if a syphon might give you a better result for draining the water from the settled bean paste.
In case you are unfamiliar with the idea, any flexible hose can be used. The water flows by gravity. The bowl of bean paste with the separated water level must be physically higher than the draining end of the tube. So the draining end can simply go into the sink.
To begin, coil the hose and immerse in the water so no air bubbles are in the hose.
You can even do this in a separate pan of water next to the paste bowl. Place your thumbs over each end of the tube and move one end of the tube into the water level of the bean paste bowl. Remove your thumbs from the two ends of the tube and the water will flow directly into the sink. Keep the suction end of the tube above the level of the paste.
This will give you much more control over the separation process without disturbing the paste.
It’s a kind of meditation. Maybe practice once or twice with just water so you get a feel for the process.
My simple recipe: 1 cup beans, cook in instant pot. 1/3 cup sugar. Blended together with water. Cook in pan until it reduces water. Let it cool
Hah. Hi power blender? Stick blender? Food processor? I can't pronounce the Japanes names, anyway. In Indian food they just peel the beans before they cook them and call it dahl. Seems easier than sieving and rinsing to Koshi-an. I once made some sweets with adzuki beans and sugar and agar agar many years ago from a recipe I found. I barely remember, but it tasted pretty good and it all got eaten.
What will happen if we pressure cooker for cooking red beans...will it change the taste of Anko...🤔
Next time do the following.
1. But Cardamom and grind just the seeds and add it with the sugar while boiling. You will feel the taste developed.
2. The one your father likes it is good for you. It has more fiber and your guts absorb the nutrients faster.
3. Try adding little bit of lime juice to balance sweetness and acidity. Trust me on this.
4. For the smoother version, I recommend you add dried orange peel . Play around with spices like nutmeg, mace, cinnamon. Enjoy the different version.
I hope you enjoy the different taste!
I only have "flor de mayo" mexican beans.... but I'll try it anyways. Let's see how it turns out.
Ok, here's my experience: taste and texture were good (made the koshi-an variation), color is plain brown instead or reddish, cooking time probably 4 times more so next time I'll definitely use pressure pan.
Separating the bean skins would be much easier with a ricer. 😊
I have a question about tanginess, in the 2nd part of your video, where you rinse the smooth paste a few times to remove tanginess, but now I do wonder, with the more rough been paste, we skip that step 😃
Does the first batch taste tangy? Can we rinse the rough paste? 😂
Could you preasure cook the beans after the first 10 minutes? I feel like it would be faster and you wouldn't have to watch it for an hour to keep it in water.
For Hindi speaking who are looking for Hindi name, you can find Azuki beans as "Laal Lobia" or "Laal chowlai"
This video has started to make my stomach rumble! 😂 Can I ask, is there a specific type of sugar that is the best to use in these recipes?
its rather a preference thing, but I prefer raw sugar, and I would avoid brown sugar. but at the end of the day, its totally up to you!
Just out of curiosity, why can't you use a mixer to break the skin and use a cloth to do the sifting for koshi-an? That could save a lot of work! I think it's cheaper to just buy the anko than going through this much work~
Danke bruder, du bist maschine
Can this be soaked overnight first?
👍
thanx!🤣
Do the beans have to be in dried form? Because I just bought untreated beans on amazon.
Wich of 2 options is better for taiyakis of anko??
Can it be eater as a green bean
I add miso instead of salt. And at the end of the process.
Tried the long koshi-an but I think I added too much water when I started boiling it because I had to boil and stir for a loooong time. Also, it didn't change color and didn't become smoother like the one in the video.
Back after a little experimenting. If you see that the paste doesn't change color and texture, and when it dries turns back into powder form, it needs more sugar.
Is this paste could be a basic for other dishes? I mean smth else than sweets. I Got only black beans at the moment :(. Thank you for the japanses tradition culture content as well
i have never seen Anko paste used in other dishes other than sweets, but the Azuki beans are sometimes used in some other salty dishes, Sekihan (cooked with rice) or cooked with pumpkin.
you are welcome and thanx for your comment!!
New friend here take care tomodachi hugs from america
Hi and thanx for your comments!
I know I am a perfect cooker but he way too perfect than me. He way too much detail and these bean look really good. I bet it take him the whole day to finish cooking
Did it today but it turned out to sweet
Is there a method to reduce the sugar
I want to make zenzai
oh cool!
well not really, either make more Anko from Azuki and add to it, or wash half or quarter so of the Anko with water and then mix to the unwashed, although with this it will lose some flavor (unless it is Koshian).
@@taijiskitchen thank you for your response I’ll give it a try
@@mahmutmereyem4582 hope it works out!!
I'd buy ready made TUSBUAN in package and heat it with added water to the density of soup. Boila you have perfect ZENNZAI. Of course you need some
plain TOASTED MOCHI in ZENZAI.
I personally like TSUBU-AN better bcz of texture. KOSHI-AN is too sticky and too dense
like in YOKAN for me although it doesn't mean I don't eat it.
❤✌
Rajma?
Are these just red mung beans?
I think those red beans skin, we can eat it as oak meals, we need fiber anyway.
Red Bean is different with kidney bean ?
They are very different. Kidney beans are twice maybe 3x bigger than Azuki beans. Even though you can make ANKO from most any beans and are in many
WAGASHI (Japanese sweets) hence you see different color ANKO inside some
Wagashi.
Using a pressure cooking, you can have the beans cooked in 15 minutes
do you live in germany or austria?
I live in Germany, near stuttgart
@@taijiskitchen cool! gar nicht so weit weg 😃 grüsse aus österreich 😎👍
As someone who speaks American English, we would say the water "evaporates" while cooking rather than the water "vaporizes." It's the same thing, but "evaporate" feels more accurate.
oh, thanx so much for your correction!
I actually learned American English, since I live in the US for total of 8 years, but since I have been away for so long, I have forgotten many things, so it is super helpful to get such insights!!
Your English is outstanding!
@@kasymarshall thanx so much!!
Actually Kasy, vaporize and evaporate are synonyms. They are completely interchangeable in “American English”. But in terms of nuanced meaning, vaporizing has a sense of being the consequence of some action taken, like boiling.
Evaporation has more of a sense a passive change of state, like transitioning from solid to liquid to gas (water vapor) when ice melts.
Why do you have to boil it twice? Why not just let it simmer for an hour or more the first time?
Bro made an edit for the azuki bean paste's lol
All i want is this but inside mochi and nobody cares they just want hamburgers.
No I'm with u....I had sweet bean paste 1 time and became completely obsessed....years later I found adzuki beans and bought 5 pounds 😂 I'm making some now cuz my 12 year old loves it SOOO much that we will literally BATTLE over the last sweet bean bun
@@hollybooth989 for real haha 💪
There are stores that sell red bean paste!! Just find ur local east asian store and there should be some
You should put them in blender then drain them is much faster
Or.... use a pot twice the size.
Just sayin
This was one thing growing up I didn't like.
well, to each's own.
I hate this long proses 😢
OOOOO NOOOOO Man! You are wasting nutritious part of the food. Why are you doing all that just to get the fine part of the beans? what a huge disaster. Honestly!!
I know what you mean and I usually don't like to throw away good food. but in order to make quality Koshi-an you need to do this, I put the skin in the compost. but of course you don't want to throw away the skin, then Tsubu-an is the right option for you! thats why I showed both variations!
thanx for your concern!!
THANKS AND NICE ONE!@@taijiskitchen