Miso Garlic King Oyster Mushrooms over rice

These Miso Garlic King Oyster Mushrooms are inspired by the grilled king oyster mushrooms at Taiwanese night markets. I sliced the mushrooms into 2-inch thick pieces that made the mushrooms pieces appear like scallops.

Cooking the Miso Garlic King Oyster Mushrooms in a pan

I then seared these to release excess moisture before cooking down the mushroom “scallop” pieces in an umami sweet-savory sauce with white miso paste, sake, mirin, soy sauce, and sugar. I then finished the mushrooms with vegan butter and garlic. Topped these with furikake and chives then served it over rice.

KING OYSTER MUSHROOM "SCALLOPS"

I sliced the mushrooms into 2-inch thick pieces that made the mushrooms pieces appear like scallops.

I then seared these to release excess moisture before cooking down the mushroom “scallop” pieces in an umami sweet-savory sauce with white miso paste, sake, mirin, soy sauce, and sugar. I then finished the mushrooms with vegan butter and garlic. Topped these with furikake and chives then served it over rice.

Miso Garlic King Oyster Mushrooms over rice

INGREDIENTS YOU'LL NEED

KING OYSTER MUSHROOMS

  • 1 lb king oyster mushrooms
  • Neutral cooking oil

FOR THE SEASONING/SAUCE

Seasoning and sauces for king oyster mushrooms

TO SERVE

  • Japanese rice
  • Furikake
  • Chopped chives or green onions
  • Layu or Japanese chili oil
Seared mushrooms with seasoning and sauces

PREPARE THE MUSHROOMS

  • Slice the king mushrooms into 2-inch thick pieces.
  • Heat a large non-stick pan or skillet over medium. Once hot, brush or spray a thin layer of oil.
  • Place the mushrooms flat side down first. Leave the mushrooms untouched for 3-4 minutes or until lightly brown. Flip over and repeat for the remaining side. You may need to do this in multiple batches depending on the size of your pan.

MISO SAUCE

  • Meanwhile, mix together the miso paste and water until the miso paste is diluted.

COOK AND SEASON THE MUSHROOMS

  • When the mushrooms have a good sear, add the sake, mirin, soy sauce, and sugar. Allow for the sake and mirin to evaporate.
  • Pour the miso paste-water mixture. Leave the mushrooms to simmer in the miso-based sauce for 3-4 minutes or over medium heat. Leave the mushrooms at a gentle simmer until the sauce has reduced and it turns into a thicker glaze-like consistency.
  • Add the vegan butter and garlic. Melt the butter and mix with the mushrooms. Taste the mushrooms and feel free to season with more soy sauce or sugar, to taste, if needed.

SERVE AND ENJOY

  • Serve hot over a bowl of steamed rice. Garnish with furikake, chives or green onions, and chili oil if desired.

MORE RECIPES YOU'LL LOVE

Looking for more Vegan Asian recipes?

You can get a copy of my cookbook, Vegan Asian!

If you crave vegan-friendly versions of classic Asian dishes, this cookbook is packed with Southeast and East Asian dishes inspired by those I grew up enjoying at home and those I’ve tried from my travels. From iconic Thai dishes to piping-hot Japanese fare and everything in between, the recipes in this will take your palate on a delicious food trip across Asia, and hopefully keep you coming back for more!

Vegan Asian Cookbook
Miso Garlic King Oyster Mushrooms over rice

Miso Garlic King Oyster Mushrooms

5 from 13 votes
These Miso Garlic King Oyster Mushrooms are inspired by the grilled king oyster mushrooms at Taiwanese night markets. I sliced the mushrooms into 2-inch thick pieces that made the mushrooms pieces appear like scallops. I then seared these to release excess moisture before cooking down the mushroom “scallop” pieces in an umami sweet-savory sauce with white miso paste, sake, mirin, soy sauce, and sugar. I then finished the mushrooms with vegan butter and garlic. Topped these with furikake and chives then served it over rice.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Course Appetizer, Main Course, Side Dish
Cuisine Asian, Chinese, East Asian, Fusion, Japanese
Servings 2 servings
Calories 243 kcal

Ingredients
 
 

MUSHROOMS

SEASONING/SAUCE

TO SERVE

Instructions
 

PREPARE THE MUSHROOMS

  • Slice the king mushrooms into 2-inch thick pieces.
  • Heat a large non-stick pan or skillet over medium. Once hot, brush or spray a thin layer of oil.
  • Place the mushrooms flat side down first. Leave the mushrooms untouched for 3-4 minutes or until lightly brown. Flip over and repeat for the remaining side. You may need to do this in multiple batches depending on the size of your pan.

MISO SAUCE

  • Meanwhile, mix together the miso paste and water until the miso paste is diluted.

SEASON THE MUSHROOMS

  • When the mushrooms have a good sear, add the sake, mirin, soy sauce, and sugar. Allow for the sake and mirin to evaporate.
  • Pour the miso paste-water mixture. Leave the mushrooms to simmer in the miso-based sauce for 3-4 minutes or over medium heat. Leave the mushrooms at a gentle simmer until the sauce has reduced and it turns into a thicker glaze-like consistency.
  • Add the vegan butter and garlic. Melt the butter and mix with the mushrooms. Taste the mushrooms and feel free to season with more soy sauce or sugar, to taste, if needed.

TO SERVE

  • Serve hot over a bowl of steamed rice. Garnish with furikake, chives or green onions, and chili oil if desired.

WATCH Video

NUTRITIONAL INFO

Serving: 1serving | Calories: 243kcal | Carbohydrates: 36g | Protein: 10g | Fat: 8g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 3g | Trans Fat: 0.03g | Sodium: 1174mg | Potassium: 1019mg | Fiber: 6g | Sugar: 16g | Vitamin A: 254IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 25mg | Iron: 4mg
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miso garlic mushrooms
Jeeca

Hello there!

Hi, I'm Jeeca, a food content creator and recipe developer behind The Foodie Takes Flight. I'm passionate about creating easy yet tasty and flavour-packed vegan recipes. I share a lot of Asian recipes inspired by my travels and those I grew up enjoying. Hope you find something you'll love!

5 from 13 votes (1 rating without comment)

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32 Comments

  1. 5 stars
    Another great one. Next time I will prepare some kind of spicy dipping sauce in addition, I always loved that combination. Also, I am earning mad respect on the language exchange app I’m using when I post pictures of your dishes so thanks 😉

      1. 5 stars
        Loved the sticky, sweet-and-savory sauce that coated the king oyster mushrooms at the end. These were delicious, my fiance and I gobbled up the whole batch. This recipe is a keeper!

  2. 5 stars
    Made this to have a veg alternative to beef Bulgari for a dinner party tonight. Love it! I added a few slices of Japanese eggplant (from the stem end, no seeds) to stretch the dish. My friend will be pleased, and her pescaterian daughter will too! Easy!

  3. 5 stars
    Made for last minute dinner with two containers of regular oyster mushrooms cut into pieces. Hubby asked. “How did you get the pork so tender and juicy…? He also couldn’t believe it was vegan and had miso, which is not his favorite, but he loved this dish! Served with simple stir-fry of bok choy, onion and carrots, which were a good foil to the richness of
    miso glaze. Adding to regular rotation.

    1. Oh wow you must’ve done some magic with those regular oyster mushrooms too 🙂 glad it turned out great!!

  4. 5 stars
    I forgot to put sake and fresh minced garlic, but I added crunchy chili garlic after cooking. It turned out great as well!

        1. Hi Laura! I haven’t tried freezing these myself but cooked mushrooms freeze quite well so these should be ok to freeze too. Let me know how ti goes if you give them a try 🙂

  5. 5 stars
    Tried this tonight and totally forgot to finish with butter and garlic, but the mushrooms were fabulous anyway! Thanks so much for this idea!

    1. Yay happy it still turned out good 🙂 the butter and garlic do add a nice touch! Hehe thanks Tanya! 🙂