Cooking Sake vs Mirin vs Soy Sauce: The Japanese Flavor Trinity
What You’ll Learn in This Article
- Why sake, mirin, and soy sauce form the “holy trinity” of Japanese cooking — and how the golden ratio works
- How cooking sake tenderizes meat, removes odors, and delivers umami that no other ingredient can replicate
- What mirin actually does — the science behind its sweetness, gloss, and irreplaceable role in glazes and sauces
- Soy sauce beyond saltiness — how fermented soybeans create the umami backbone of Japanese cuisine
- Practical ratios, timing rules, and recipes for using all three together with confidence
If you have ever watched a Japanese home cook prepare a weeknight dinner, you noticed something: three bottles come out before anything else. Sake. Mirin. Soy sauce. These three ingredients appear in virtually every savory Japanese recipe — from a simple teriyaki glaze to a complex dashi-based braise — and understanding how they interact is the single most important skill you can develop for Japanese cooking at home.
This guide breaks down the individual role of each ingredient, explains why the classic 1:1:1 ratio works as a starting point, and shows you how to adjust proportions for different dishes. Whether you are making your first batch of nikujaga or refining a sauce you have been cooking for years, the information here will sharpen your understanding of what is actually happening in the pot.

Supervised by
Daichi Takemoto
Authentic Bartender & Owner of Obanzai Nanchatte, Kobe
With 8 years of experience as a professional bartender and now the owner of "Obanzai Nanchatte" in Kobe, Daichi brings hands-on expertise in Japanese sake, whisky, and food pairing to every article on Kanpai Navi.
Table of Contents
- The Holy Trinity of Japanese Cooking: Sake, Mirin, and Soy Sauce
- The Golden Ratio: Your Starting Point
- Sake in Cooking: The Umami Engine
- What Sake Actually Does in a Recipe
- When to Add Sake: Timing Matters
- Choosing the Right Sake for Cooking
- Mirin in Cooking: The Sweet Alchemist
- What Mirin Actually Does in a Recipe
- When to Add Mirin: Later Is Better
- Types of Mirin: Not All Are Equal
- Soy Sauce in Cooking: The Umami Backbone
- How Soy Sauce Is Made
- What Soy Sauce Does in a Recipe
- Types of Soy Sauce for Japanese Cooking
- How They Work Together: The Science of Balance
- The Complementary Relationship
- Practical Technique: Building a Sauce Step by Step
- Classic Recipes Using the Golden Ratio
- Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
- Mistake 1: Adding sake too late
- Mistake 2: Treating mirin and sugar as interchangeable
- Mistake 3: Using too much soy sauce
- Mistake 4: Using the wrong type of mirin
- Mistake 5: Not adjusting for salt in cooking sake
- Beyond the Basics: Advanced Applications
- Sake as a Marinade (Sake-jime)
- Mirin Finish (Teri-zuke)
- Nikiri: The Sushi Chef’s Secret Sauce
- Tare: Long-Cooked Sauce for Yakitori and Grilled Dishes
- Substitutions: What to Do When You Are Missing an Ingredient
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Can I use drinking sake for cooking?
- What is the difference between mirin and sake in cooking?
- Does the alcohol in sake and mirin cook off completely?
- How long do these ingredients last after opening?
- Is the golden ratio always 1:1:1?
- Can I use Chinese soy sauce instead of Japanese soy sauce?
- The Bottom Line
The Holy Trinity of Japanese Cooking: Sake, Mirin, and Soy Sauce
Every cuisine has its foundational flavor combination. French cooking has mirepoix. Cajun cooking has the “holy trinity” of onion, celery, and bell pepper. Japanese cooking has sake, mirin, and soy sauce — three liquid seasonings that, when combined, produce the unmistakable flavor profile that defines washoku (traditional Japanese cuisine).
What makes this trio remarkable is how each ingredient addresses a different dimension of flavor. Sake contributes umami depth and aroma while tenderizing proteins. Mirin adds sweetness and a glossy sheen. Soy sauce delivers salt, color, and its own layer of fermented umami. No single ingredient can do what all three accomplish together.
| Ingredient | Primary Role | Flavor Contribution | When to Add |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sake | Umami + tenderizing | Depth, aroma, subtle sweetness | Early in cooking |
| Mirin | Sweetness + gloss | Balanced sweetness, glossy finish (teri) | Mid to late in cooking |
| Soy sauce | Salt + color | Salty umami, dark color, complexity | Throughout cooking |
The Golden Ratio: Your Starting Point
The foundation of Japanese seasoning is deceptively simple:
1 part sake : 1 part soy sauce : 1 part mirin
This equal-parts ratio is the baseline for dozens of classic Japanese preparations, including teriyaki sauce, nikujaga braising liquid, sukiyaki warishita, and basic stir-fry sauces. It creates a perfectly balanced flavor that is simultaneously savory, sweet, and deep — the signature taste that most people identify as “Japanese.”
The beauty of this ratio is its flexibility. Once you understand what each ingredient contributes, you can shift the balance to suit any dish:
| Desired Result | Adjusted Ratio (Sake : Soy : Mirin) | Example Dish |
|---|---|---|
| Sweeter / more glazed | 1 : 1 : 1.5 | Teriyaki chicken, unagi kabayaki |
| More savory / deeper | 1.5 : 1 : 1 | Braised pork belly (kakuni) |
| Saltier / bolder | 1 : 1.5 : 1 | Quick stir-fry sauce, yakitori tare |
| Lighter / more delicate | 2 : 0.5 : 1 | Simmered white fish, chawanmushi seasoning |
| Classic balanced | 1 : 1 : 1 | Nikujaga, standard simmered dishes |
Sake in Cooking: The Umami Engine
Of the three ingredients, sake used in cooking is the one that most Western cooks underestimate. It is easy to understand what sugar does (sweetness) and what salt does (saltiness), but sake’s contribution is subtler and harder to replace. Sake is the umami engine of Japanese cooking — the ingredient that gives dishes their depth, complexity, and that elusive quality Japanese cooks call “koku” (richness).
What Sake Actually Does in a Recipe
Sake performs four distinct functions when used in cooking, and understanding each one helps you know when and how much to use.
1. Adds umami and aroma
Sake is a fermented beverage. During its brewing process, enzymes break rice proteins into amino acids — including glutamic acid, the compound responsible for umami taste. When you add sake to a dish, you are adding a concentrated source of naturally occurring umami that amplifies the savory taste of every other ingredient in the pot. The aromatic compounds in sake (esters, organic acids) also contribute a subtle fragrance that rounds out the overall flavor.
2. Tenderizes meat, poultry, and seafood
With an ABV of 13-17%, sake contains enough alcohol to partially denature surface proteins in meat and seafood. This has a tenderizing effect, particularly on tougher cuts. Japanese cooks have long used sake marinades for chicken thighs, pork shoulder, and firm-fleshed fish — not just for flavor, but because the result is noticeably more tender.
3. Eliminates unpleasant odors
This function is so important in Japanese cooking that it has its own term: “kusami-keshi” (臭み消し), meaning odor removal. Fish, shellfish, organ meats, and game all carry volatile compounds that create “off” smells during cooking. Alcohol in sake bonds with these volatile compounds and carries them away as it evaporates. This is why many Japanese fish recipes begin with a sake rinse or a brief sake simmer — it is not about adding flavor, but about removing something undesirable.
4. Draws out natural flavors
Alcohol is a solvent. It dissolves flavor compounds that water alone cannot reach, extracting them from ingredients and distributing them throughout the dish. When you add sake early in the cooking process, the alcohol works as a flavor courier — pulling taste from ingredients and dispersing it into the liquid, creating a more unified, cohesive flavor in the finished dish.
| Function | How It Works | Practical Example |
|---|---|---|
| Umami boost | Amino acids from rice fermentation add savory depth | Splash of sake in miso soup deepens flavor |
| Tenderizing | Alcohol denatures surface proteins | Sake-marinated chicken thighs become more tender |
| Odor removal | Alcohol bonds with volatiles and evaporates away | Sake rinse on mackerel before grilling |
| Flavor extraction | Alcohol dissolves and distributes flavor compounds | Sake added to nimono draws flavors into broth |
When to Add Sake: Timing Matters
Sake should be added early in the cooking process — typically as one of the first liquids in the pan. There is a practical reason for this: you want the alcohol to evaporate fully, leaving behind only the umami, aroma, and tenderizing benefits. If you add sake at the very end of cooking, the residual alcohol can create a harsh, boozy taste that overwhelms the dish.
The standard Japanese cooking sequence is:
- Heat oil, cook aromatics (ginger, garlic, green onion)
- Add protein or vegetables
- Add sake — let it sizzle and begin evaporating
- Add dashi or water
- Add soy sauce
- Add mirin (later, for sweetness and gloss)
This sequence exists for a reason. Sake goes in early so the alcohol can cook off. Soy sauce goes in the middle to season the braising liquid. Mirin goes in late to add sweetness and gloss without burning its sugars.

Daichi Takemoto
A common mistake I see is people treating cooking sake and drinking sake as identical. They are not. Dedicated cooking sake (ryori-shu) often contains added salt, which affects how much soy sauce you need. If you are using a good-quality drinking sake for cooking, reduce your soy sauce slightly to compensate for the absence of that salt. And never use cooking sake that has sugar or corn syrup added — it will throw off your ratios completely.
Choosing the Right Sake for Cooking
Not all sake is appropriate for cooking, but you also do not need an expensive bottle. The ideal cooking sake is a dry (not sweet), clean-tasting junmai or futsushu that you would be willing to drink — even if it is not the sake you would choose for a special occasion.
| Sake Type | Good for Cooking? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Junmai | Excellent | Clean umami, no added alcohol — ideal choice |
| Futsushu (table sake) | Good | Affordable, works well for everyday cooking |
| Ryori-shu (cooking sake) | Acceptable | Contains added salt — adjust soy sauce accordingly |
| Junmai daiginjo | Unnecessary | Delicate aromatics are lost during cooking — save it for drinking |
| Flavored/infused sake | Not recommended | Added flavors interfere with dish balance |
If you do not have sake available, see our guide to sake substitutes in cooking for the best alternatives.
Mirin in Cooking: The Sweet Alchemist
Mirin is sake’s sweeter, lower-alcohol cousin — and its role in Japanese cooking is just as essential but entirely different. While sake works behind the scenes (tenderizing, removing odors, boosting umami), mirin works on the surface — literally. Its most celebrated effect is “teri” (照り), the beautiful glossy sheen on teriyaki chicken, grilled eel, and simmered dishes that makes them look as good as they taste.
What Mirin Actually Does in a Recipe
1. Adds natural sweetness
Mirin’s sweetness comes from sugars produced during its own fermentation process — not from refined sugar. This gives mirin a complex, rounded sweetness that integrates into a dish more gracefully than granulated sugar ever could. The sugar content in hon-mirin (true mirin) is substantial — roughly 40-50% of its weight — which is why a small amount goes a long way.
2. Creates teri (gloss/shine)
This is mirin’s signature trick. When mirin is heated, its sugars caramelize on the surface of proteins and vegetables, creating a lacquered, glossy coating. The word “teriyaki” literally comes from “teri” (shine) + “yaki” (grilled) — and that shine is impossible to achieve without mirin. Sugar alone will not produce the same effect because mirin’s complex sugars caramelize differently from sucrose, producing a thinner, more even, more lustrous glaze.
3. Balances salty and savory flavors
In any dish that uses soy sauce or miso, mirin acts as the counterweight. Its sweetness tempers the salt, preventing dishes from becoming harsh or one-dimensional. This balancing act is so fundamental that Japanese cooking instructors often describe mirin as soy sauce’s “partner” — the two are rarely used without each other.
4. Firms texture and prevents overcooking
Mirin’s sugars help proteins hold their shape during cooking. This is why simmered fish dishes (nimono) almost always include mirin — it prevents delicate fish fillets from breaking apart in the broth. The sugars create a gentle “set” on the surface of the protein that maintains structural integrity.
When to Add Mirin: Later Is Better
Unlike sake, which goes in early, mirin should typically be added in the mid-to-late stages of cooking. There are two reasons:
First, mirin’s sugars burn easily. Adding mirin too early in a high-heat preparation risks scorching the sugars, which creates bitter flavors instead of the desired sweetness.
Second, mirin’s glazing effect (teri) requires concentration. If you add mirin at the beginning and dilute it with other liquids, you lose the glossy finish. For dishes where teri is the goal — teriyaki, kabayaki, nitsuke — mirin is often added in the final minutes and the sauce reduced rapidly to create the glaze.
The alcohol content of mirin ranges from 1% to 14%, depending on the type. Hon-mirin (true mirin) sits at the higher end (around 14%), while mirin-fu chomiryo (mirin-like seasoning) has little to no alcohol. If you are using hon-mirin, a brief simmer will cook off the alcohol while preserving the sweetness.
Types of Mirin: Not All Are Equal
| Type | Alcohol | Sugar Source | Quality | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hon-mirin (本みりん) | ~14% | Natural fermentation | Highest | All cooking, especially glazing |
| Shio-mirin (塩みりん) | ~14% + salt | Natural fermentation | Good | General cooking (adjust salt) |
| Mirin-fu chomiryo | <1% | Corn syrup + additives | Low | Budget cooking only |
Caution
Do not confuse hon-mirin with “mirin-fu chomiryo” (mirin-like seasoning). Mirin-like seasonings are made with corn syrup, acidifiers, and artificial flavors — they lack the complex fermented sugars that make real mirin irreplaceable. If the ingredient label lists corn syrup or glucose-fructose as a main ingredient, it is not true mirin. For the golden ratio to work as intended, always use hon-mirin. The mirin-like alternatives will produce a flatter, less nuanced sweetness that throws off the balance with sake and soy sauce.Soy Sauce in Cooking: The Umami Backbone
Soy sauce is the most globally recognized of the three ingredients, yet it is also the most misunderstood. Many Western cooks treat soy sauce as a simple salt delivery mechanism — a liquid alternative to table salt. This undersells soy sauce dramatically. Soy sauce is a complex fermented condiment that provides salt, umami, color, and hundreds of aromatic compounds in a single ingredient.
How Soy Sauce Is Made
Traditional soy sauce (shoyu) is made from just four ingredients: soybeans, wheat, salt, and water. The soybeans and wheat are inoculated with koji mold (Aspergillus oryzae) — the same organism used in sake and miso production — and fermented in brine for six months to two years. During this extended fermentation, proteins break down into amino acids (creating umami), starches convert to sugars (adding sweetness), and hundreds of volatile flavor compounds develop (providing aroma and complexity).
The result is a liquid that contains more free glutamic acid per milliliter than almost any other condiment on earth — which is why a small splash of soy sauce makes nearly everything taste better.
What Soy Sauce Does in a Recipe
1. Provides salt with complexity
Salt is essential in cooking, but soy sauce delivers salt alongside umami, sweetness, and aroma — four dimensions of flavor in a single pour. This is why replacing soy sauce with plain salt never produces the same result. The salt in soy sauce is integrated into a matrix of fermented flavors that interacts with other ingredients differently than crystalline sodium chloride.
2. Adds deep color
The Maillard reaction that occurs during soy sauce fermentation produces melanoidins — brown pigments that give soy sauce its characteristic dark color. When soy sauce is added to a dish, it imparts a rich, appetizing brown hue that signals depth of flavor. This is why soy sauce-based dishes look “cooked” and satisfying — the color communicates flavor before you even taste it.
3. Delivers fermented umami
Soy sauce’s umami comes from a different source than sake’s. While sake’s umami derives from rice fermentation, soy sauce’s umami comes from soybean protein fermentation — a process that produces a different spectrum of amino acids and flavor compounds. When you combine sake and soy sauce in the same dish, you get layered umami from two distinct fermentation pathways, which is why the combination tastes more complete than either ingredient alone.
4. Acts as an aromatic enhancer
Soy sauce contains over 300 identified volatile compounds. When heated, these aromatics release into the air, creating the deeply appetizing smell associated with Japanese cooking. The smell of soy sauce hitting a hot pan is one of the most recognizable aromas in world cuisine.
Types of Soy Sauce for Japanese Cooking
| Type | Color | Salt Level | Flavor Profile | Common Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Koikuchi (dark) | Dark brown | ~16% | All-purpose, balanced | Most recipes — the default soy sauce |
| Usukuchi (light) | Amber | ~18% | Lighter flavor, higher salt | When color must stay light (chawanmushi, udon) |
| Tamari | Very dark | ~17% | Rich, thick, soybean-forward | Dipping sauce, finishing, gluten-free option |
| Saishikomi (twice-brewed) | Very dark | ~14% | Intense, complex, sweet | Sashimi dip, finishing drizzle |
| Shiro (white) | Pale gold | ~18% | Sweet, mild, wheat-forward | Delicate soups, egg dishes |
For the golden ratio and most everyday Japanese cooking, koikuchi (dark soy sauce) is the standard choice. When Japanese recipes simply say “soy sauce” without further specification, they mean koikuchi.

Daichi Takemoto
People often ask me whether expensive artisan soy sauce is worth it for cooking. My answer: for raw applications (dipping sashimi, finishing a dish), absolutely — the difference between a two-year naturally brewed soy sauce and a mass-market version is dramatic. For cooked applications where soy sauce is one of many ingredients simmered together, the difference narrows significantly. Use good soy sauce, but save your best bottle for the table, not the stove.
How They Work Together: The Science of Balance
Understanding each ingredient individually is useful. Understanding how they interact as a system is transformative. The reason this trio has survived centuries of Japanese culinary evolution is that each ingredient compensates for what the others lack.
The Complementary Relationship
Sake adds depth and aroma but lacks sweetness and salt. Mirin adds sweetness and gloss but lacks the savory backbone and tenderizing power. Soy sauce adds salt and color but can become harsh and one-dimensional without the softening effect of sake’s umami and mirin’s sweetness.
Together, they create a flavor greater than the sum of its parts — a phenomenon that Japanese food scientists describe as “aji no balance” (味のバランス, flavor balance). Each ingredient occupies a different frequency on the flavor spectrum, and when combined, they fill the entire range from savory to sweet to aromatic to salty.
| Flavor Dimension | Sake’s Contribution | Mirin’s Contribution | Soy Sauce’s Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Umami | High (rice amino acids) | Moderate (fermented sugars) | Very high (soybean amino acids) |
| Sweetness | Low (subtle) | Very high (natural sugars) | Low (trace) |
| Saltiness | None (unless ryori-shu) | None | Very high |
| Aroma | High (esters, alcohols) | Moderate (caramel, honey) | Very high (300+ compounds) |
| Color | None | Light amber | Dark brown |
| Texture effect | Tenderizing | Glazing, firming | Minimal |
Practical Technique: Building a Sauce Step by Step
Here is the method professional Japanese cooks use to build a balanced sauce using all three ingredients. This approach works for teriyaki, nimono (simmered dishes), and most braise-based preparations.
Step 1: Start with sake. Add sake to the pan first and let it come to a simmer. This does three things simultaneously — it deglazes the pan (pulling up fond from seared proteins), begins evaporating the alcohol, and starts distributing umami throughout the cooking liquid.
Step 2: Add your base liquid. Dashi, water, or stock goes in next. This creates the body of the sauce. The sake has already begun its work of flavor extraction and odor removal.
Step 3: Add soy sauce. Add soy sauce once the liquid is simmering — this allows the soy’s amino acids to interact with the heat and develop deeper flavors through the Maillard reaction. If you are making a lighter dish, use less soy sauce. For bolder preparations, increase it.
Step 4: Finish with mirin. Add mirin in the final third of cooking. If you want a glaze (teri), increase heat after adding mirin and reduce the sauce until it coats the back of a spoon. The sugars will concentrate and caramelize, producing that coveted sheen.
Classic Recipes Using the Golden Ratio
Basic Teriyaki Sauce
| Ingredient | Amount | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Sake | 3 tablespoons | Umami depth, tenderizes protein |
| Soy sauce (koikuchi) | 3 tablespoons | Salt, color, savory base |
| Mirin | 3 tablespoons | Sweetness, gloss |
Combine all three in a saucepan. Bring to a simmer over medium heat and cook for 3-4 minutes until the alcohol evaporates and the sauce reduces by about one-third. Use immediately as a glaze for grilled or pan-fried chicken, salmon, or tofu. The 1:1:1 ratio produces a perfectly balanced teriyaki that is neither too sweet, too salty, nor too thin.
Nikujaga (Meat and Potato Stew) Seasoning
For four servings, use 3 tablespoons each of sake, soy sauce, and mirin plus 1 cup of dashi. Add sake first when sauteing the meat, then add dashi and soy sauce, simmer with vegetables until tender, and finish with mirin in the last 5 minutes. The sake tenderizes the thinly sliced beef, the soy sauce seasons the broth, and the mirin adds a gentle sweetness that makes nikujaga taste like home.
Quick Stir-Fry Sauce
For rapid, high-heat cooking, pre-mix your golden ratio ingredients in a small bowl before you start cooking. When the stir-fry is nearly done, pour the mixture into the hot wok all at once. The intense heat will evaporate the alcohol almost instantly, the soy sauce will caramelize on the vegetables, and the mirin will create a light glaze that coats everything evenly.
Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Even experienced home cooks make errors when working with these three ingredients. Here are the most frequent problems and their solutions.
Mistake 1: Adding sake too late
If you add sake in the final minutes of cooking, the alcohol does not have time to evaporate. Raw alcohol tastes harsh and astringent — it overpowers the delicate umami that sake is supposed to contribute. Always add sake early and give it at least 2-3 minutes of active simmering before adding other liquids.
Mistake 2: Treating mirin and sugar as interchangeable
Granulated sugar dissolves into a single note of sweetness. Mirin provides sweetness plus amino acids, organic acids, and aromatic compounds that create a rounder, more integrated flavor. Mirin also produces teri (gloss) that sugar cannot replicate. If you must substitute sugar for mirin in an emergency, use roughly half the amount and know that the result will taste less complex.
Mistake 3: Using too much soy sauce
Soy sauce is intensely salty and strongly flavored. Over-pouring soy sauce is the number one reason home-cooked Japanese food tastes “off.” Start with less than you think you need, taste, and adjust. Remember that soy sauce concentration increases as liquids reduce — a sauce that tastes perfectly seasoned at the start of simmering may be too salty by the end.
Mistake 4: Using the wrong type of mirin
Mirin-fu chomiryo (mirin-like seasoning) contains corn syrup, acidifiers, and sometimes MSG. While it can work in a pinch, it produces a thinner, less nuanced sweetness that does not caramelize the same way. For any dish where glaze matters — teriyaki, kabayaki, nitsuke — hon-mirin is non-negotiable.
Mistake 5: Not adjusting for salt in cooking sake
If you are using ryori-shu (cooking sake with added salt) instead of regular sake, you must reduce your soy sauce to avoid over-salting. A good starting adjustment is to reduce soy sauce by 25% when using salted cooking sake.

Daichi Takemoto
The biggest shift in my cooking came when I stopped measuring these three ingredients by volume and started measuring by taste. The 1:1:1 ratio is a starting point — a reliable template that will never produce a bad result. But your soy sauce is not the same salt level as mine, your mirin may be sweeter than what I use, and your sake may have more or less acidity. Taste as you go. Add the sake first, let it cook, then add soy sauce gradually, tasting after each addition, and finish with mirin to your preferred sweetness. Your palate is a better measuring tool than any tablespoon.
Beyond the Basics: Advanced Applications
Once you are comfortable with the golden ratio and the standard timing sequence, there are several advanced techniques that Japanese professional cooks use to elevate dishes further.
Sake as a Marinade (Sake-jime)
Soaking fish fillets in sake for 15-30 minutes before cooking accomplishes two things simultaneously: it firms the texture slightly (the alcohol tightens surface proteins) and removes any fishy odor completely. This is standard practice in sushi restaurants — even very fresh fish receives a brief sake treatment. After marinating, pat the fish dry before cooking. The sake has already done its work.
Mirin Finish (Teri-zuke)
For dishes where maximum gloss is desired, Japanese cooks use a technique called “teri-zuke” — brushing mirin onto the surface of grilled proteins during the last minute of cooking. The direct heat caramelizes the sugars instantly, creating a lacquered finish. This technique is essential for unagi kabayaki (grilled eel) and high-quality yakitori.
Nikiri: The Sushi Chef’s Secret Sauce
Nikiri is a blend of sake, mirin, and soy sauce that has been gently simmered until the alcohol evaporates and the flavors meld into a smooth, unified sauce. Sushi chefs brush nikiri onto nigiri instead of having customers dip each piece in soy sauce — it delivers the same flavor components in a more controlled, elegant way. A basic nikiri uses roughly 2 parts soy sauce, 1 part mirin, and 1 part sake, simmered gently for 10 minutes and cooled.
Tare: Long-Cooked Sauce for Yakitori and Grilled Dishes
Tare (sauce) used at yakitori restaurants is built on the golden ratio but enriched over time. The base is equal parts sake, soy sauce, and mirin simmered together. As skewers are dipped into the tare and returned to the grill, drippings from the chicken fall back into the sauce, adding layers of gelatin and rendered flavor. Some yakitori shops have tare pots that have been continuously replenished for decades — each dip adds complexity.
Substitutions: What to Do When You Are Missing an Ingredient
In an ideal world, you would always have all three ingredients on hand. In reality, bottles run out. Here is how to adapt when one ingredient is missing.
| Missing Ingredient | Best Substitute | Ratio Adjustment | What You Lose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sake | Dry white wine or dry sherry | Equal amount | Specific rice umami; wine adds acidity |
| Mirin | 1 tbsp sake + 1 tsp sugar per 1 tbsp mirin | Approximate | Natural gloss (teri), complex sweetness |
| Soy sauce | Salt + a splash of Worcestershire | 1/4 tsp salt per 1 tbsp soy | Color, fermented umami, aroma |
These substitutions will keep your dish in the right flavor territory, but none of them are true equivalents. The fermentation-derived flavors of sake, mirin, and soy sauce cannot be perfectly replicated by non-fermented ingredients. Keep all three stocked in your pantry — they are shelf-stable and last for months (soy sauce and mirin keep for a year or more at room temperature; sake should be refrigerated after opening and used within 2-3 months for cooking).
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use drinking sake for cooking?
Yes, and many Japanese cooks prefer it. A good-quality drinking sake produces cleaner umami than cooking sake (ryori-shu) because it does not contain added salt or preservatives. Use an affordable junmai or futsushu — there is no need to cook with premium ginjo or daiginjo, as the delicate aromatics are destroyed by heat.
What is the difference between mirin and sake in cooking?
Sake and mirin serve different functions. Sake adds umami, tenderizes proteins, removes odors, and extracts flavors — it goes in early. Mirin adds sweetness and gloss — it goes in late. Sake has higher alcohol (13-17%) and minimal sugar. Mirin has lower alcohol (1-14%) and high sugar. They are complementary, not interchangeable.
Does the alcohol in sake and mirin cook off completely?
Most of the alcohol evaporates during cooking, but trace amounts remain even after extended simmering. Studies show that after 15 minutes of simmering, roughly 40% of the original alcohol remains; after 30 minutes, about 35%. For most dishes, the residual amount is negligible. If you need to eliminate alcohol completely for dietary or religious reasons, simmer the sauce for at least 2 hours or seek alcohol-free alternatives.
How long do these ingredients last after opening?
Soy sauce keeps for 1-2 years at room temperature once opened (refrigeration preserves flavor longer). Hon-mirin keeps for 3+ months at room temperature. Sake for cooking should be refrigerated and used within 2-3 months of opening for best flavor. All three will remain safe to consume well beyond these windows, but flavor quality declines over time.
Is the golden ratio always 1:1:1?
The 1:1:1 ratio is a starting point, not a rule. Professional Japanese cooks adjust the ratio based on the dish, the protein, and personal taste. Sweeter dishes shift toward more mirin. Bolder preparations increase soy sauce. Lighter, more delicate recipes increase sake and reduce the others. The ratio gives you a reliable baseline from which to experiment.
Can I use Chinese soy sauce instead of Japanese soy sauce?
Chinese soy sauce and Japanese soy sauce (shoyu) are different products. Japanese koikuchi shoyu contains wheat, which gives it a slightly sweeter, more rounded flavor. Chinese soy sauce is often wheat-free and tastes sharper and more intensely salty. You can use Chinese soy sauce in a pinch, but reduce the quantity by about 20% and expect a slightly different flavor profile.
The Bottom Line
Sake, mirin, and soy sauce are not just three common ingredients that happen to appear in the same recipes. They are a deliberately calibrated system where each component fulfills a role that the others cannot. Sake provides umami depth, tenderizes proteins, and removes unwanted odors. Mirin adds natural sweetness and the irreplaceable glossy finish that defines so many Japanese dishes. Soy sauce delivers salt, color, and a second, distinct layer of fermented umami that complements sake’s contribution.
The 1:1:1 golden ratio is your entry point — a reliable formula that produces balanced, authentically Japanese flavor every time. But the real mastery comes from understanding why each ingredient works, when to add it, and how to adjust the proportions for different dishes and different tastes. Start with the ratio. Taste as you go. Adjust with confidence. These three bottles, used well, will transform your Japanese cooking from approximation to authenticity.