
Eat Natto, Life Longer?
“After controlling for other diet components, hypertension, diabetes, smoking, alcohol intake and other factors, the researchers found that compared with those in the lowest one-fifth for fermented soy intake, those in the highest one-fifth had a 10 percent lower risk of death from any cause. Those in the highest one-fifth for natto intake, but not miso, had an 18 percent lower risk of cardiovascular disease death, possibly because of the lower sodium content of natto.”
– Nicholas Bakalar

Kopitiam’s Moonlynn Tsai Knows Where to Get the Good Natto
“I love that slimy goodness paired with a cup of green tea.”
– Moonlynn Tsai

Obsessed: Getting Funky With Natto
“I was skeptical, until the moment I tried it. It has a fuller, more complex flavor than the stuff I'd been buying here, which always seemed an insipid echo of the kind my family buys in Japan, despite the fact that I buy the same brand.”
– Sho Spaeth

New York sake and nattō
“It’s completely different from commercial nattō. What you find in local Japanese supermarkets is frozen and air-freighted, so hers is naturally fresher with different aroma, bite, stickiness and nutritional value. This shows how completely Japanese food has penetrated the New York food scene, when people are driven to make their own because there’s something missing.”
– Arline Lyons

Ann Yonetani: An Accidental Microbe Farmer
“From sushi to ramen, there are plenty of Japanese staples Americans have readily embraced. Natto, a superfood made from sticky fermented soybeans, isn’t one of them ... yet.”
– Hannah Chenoweth

ブルックリン産のできたて納豆 (古くて新しい、とっておきのブルックリンへ 035)
(Fresh-made Brooklyn natto <Best of Brooklyn, old and new>)

(Video) American Chemical Society Reactions: What is Natto?
“It’s often compared to washed-rind cheese in terms of it’s complex funkiness and general, ort of, in-your-face-ness.”
– Ann Yonetani

My New York Obsession: Stinky, Delicious, Small-Batch Natto
“When I am not enjoying Yonetani’s natto, I’m often ogling it on her Instagram feed: Natto on nachos! Natto on deviled eggs! And, of course: natto on pizza!”
– Roxanne Khamsi

Natto: Japan’s Probiotic Superfood
At this talk, microbiologist and natto maker Dr. Ann Yonetani, founder of Brooklyn-based NYrture Food, dishes on her favorite ways to prepare natto, examines both traditional and novel culinary pairings, and breaks down the food science behind this soybean sensation.
Moderated by Sho Spaeth, Features Editor at Serious Eats.

All Black Everything: A New Wave of #Goth Superfoods 7 jet-black superfoods to look out for in 2018
“We love NYrture’s black New York Natto, which is made fresh in NYC from sustainably grown black soybeans that are rich in anti-inflammatory and antioxidant compounds.”
– Molly Beauchemin

ニューヨークに納豆を製造する会社がある「米国の食事には納豆が合う」("A natto maker in New York: 'Natto goes well with American food'")

Are you ready to eat your natto?
“Dr. Yonetani, who calls herself a ‘microbe farmer,’ says that each tablespoon of her finished product contains a billion of the healthful soil bacteria Bacillus subtilis, a count that is ‘orders of magnitude greater than what you would find in a typical probiotic food.’”
–Richard Schiffman

NY発、細菌学者の手がけた“Natto Sand”
("In NY, a microbiologist is making 'natto sandwiches'")
BROKEN LINK

Natto: 'It's like a vegan stinky cheese.'
“I tell people who are not Japanese to think outside of the box and not feel that they need to eat it with rice. … It's like a vegan stinky cheese.”
– Ann Yonetani in an interview with Von Diaz
















