Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts

Monday, February 22, 2010

Of fish bones and blowfish

Ahh, it's been a while since I've posted. Sorry about that. Let's get started with the fun and interesting things that I get to say!

To start with, Nat and I ate fugu (blowfish). Just the skin, but it was still fugu. We never really expected to. We never really had the desire to. I mean, with the potential for it being fatally poisonous one wonders why people have bothered preparing it in the first place. But we were at a restaurant with the English conversation group and fugu skins were one of the day's specials. It was actually pretty good. I still don't think I'd choose to order it in the future, but it's something we can say we've done.

On the note of eating fish, one day I had noticed little, glazed fish skeletons for sale at the grocery store. I thought I'd try some. They come in different flavors, so I chose one that I thought looked good. I didn't like it. To me, it tasted like a piece of chalk rolled on the floor of a fish market. It's actually better than that, but I just didn't like it. Of course, the Japanese usually eat these as a snack when drinking beer. We gave them away to one of our friends here who likes them.

I also picked up some odango at the store. Odango are commonly translated into English as dumplings. They are made of mochi (sticky rice which has been pounded into a doughy texture. The glaze is mildly salty; mostly sweet. I love them. Nat doesn't like them as much. More for me! Mmmmmm!










I made spanakorizo again, so I took a picture of the shiso leaves so that you can see what they look like. Not that it's an exciting thing to look at. It's just one of the things we get here. I mentioned before that it has a bit of a minty flavor. It's actually somewhere between mint and parsley, I think. In the end, it just tastes like shiso.

We also ate a bit of an incorrect version of sukiyaki this week. Mostly because we don't have the right pot for it. We used our clay pot, instead. Sukiyaki is typically cooked at the dinner table and you pick the food out as it cooks and eat it. I used a few ingredients which are not normally included in sukiyaki, like lotus root and udon noodles. The reason why one doesn't typically use a clay pot for sukiyaki is that the very thinly-sliced beef used in the dish is supposed to be fried at the bottom of the pot before the broth and vegetables are added. I fried the beef in a frying pan, instead and then started up the clay pot. We had Japanese leeks, shitake mushrooms, mushrooms, enoki mushrooms, lotus root, tofu, udon noodles, komatsuna (a leafy vegetable which appears to be translated as Japanese mustard spinach) and hakusai cabbage. There may have been more, but I don't remember it all. Traditionally, when one eats sukiyaki, they dip the hot food in raw scrambled egg just before eating it.

Yesterday, we ate shabu-shabu with several of the JETs and people from two of the town's English conversation groups. Shabu-shabu is similar to sukiyaki in that it is cooked in a pot at the dinner table and everyone grabs what they want out of it. Major differences are that the meat is cooked in the broth, the broth is more simple and you dip the food in sauces instead of raw egg. Shabu-shabu broth is a simple dashi broth (large pieces of dried kelp are boiled in water for roughly half an hour and then removed, leaving the broth). Sukiyaki broth includes dashi broth, soy sauce, sake, mirin (a sweet cooking sake) and sugar; the result, however, is not too sweet (unless you want it to be, some people like sweet sukiyaki).

The shabu-shabu party was fun and we were really glad to see everyone. We ate way too much food, though...and that was before they pulled out the snacks for tea afterward!



One of our dishes.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Thanksgiving in Japan

As American Thanksgiving comes to a close in America (it's already after noon on the day after here), I am finally getting around to typing a post. We've been busy with one thing or another, so I'll try to get you all updated.

Before that, here's our Thanksgiving dinner:

We don't get turkeys in Japan (unless we're looking to order one to be delivered) and even if we did, we don't really have the microwave space to cook it in. We did learn how to use our microwave as an oven, though. Apparently, you can put metal in the microwave when using the oven settings.

Our meal consisted of chicken, corn on the cob (from Hokkaido, Japan's northern-most island...where all the wheat, corn and cows grow), a butter croissant and mashed potatoes with creamy chicken-mushroom dressing.

It was just the two of us, so this was more than enough food. After dinner, Toshiko visited for tea and sweets.

Monday was Japanese Labor Thanksgiving. It's not a major holiday, but Nat had the day off. One of her coworkers (who also happens to be our neighbor) went fishing earlier in the day and offered some of his fish to us. The three near-identical looking fish are horse mackerel and the reddish one is sea bream. The sea bream's fins are spiny and it has sharp teeth.

This was my first time to clean or fillet a fish. I think I did pretty well, but I know I could have done a lot better. The first day, we ate two of the mackerel. I made a mixture of yellow miso paste, crushed garlic, grated ginger and sake. I spread the mixture over the fillets and pan fried them for a couple minutes, flipped 'em, fried them for a minute more and they were done! Mmmm!

The next day, we ate the other two fish. This time, I rubbed salt, pepper, paprika and thyme into the fillets and marinated them in olive oil and sake (white wine would work just as well, but all we had in the house was red wine and sake). They only need to marinade for half an hour to an hour. If you have other things to prepare for the meal, just let them marinate while you get everything else ready. Chop up half an onion and some garlic and start frying them in some alive oil. Place the fillets on top of the garlic and onions, skin-side down. Fry for two to three minutes and flip for one last minute. Delicious.

Sunday, we went hiking to see a waterfall near Miyazu with some of the English conversation group members. I'm sorry to say we forgot to bring our camera, so you won't be able to see how awesome it was (unless Nat gets the pictures off of her cell phone). Afterward, we went to lunch and did some shopping.

Saturday (yes, I'm taking you backward through time), Nat made spaghetti carbonara and we invited another one of Nat's coworkers (also our neighbor) over for dinner and movies. I made garlic bread and a salad. We watched Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends and Moulin Rouge.

I think that's all of the things that we haven't had a chance to tell you about yet. They're not huge events, but they're what's been keeping us busy for the past week. Tomorrow, we're going to see an exhibit of wood block prints. I'm excited.

Obviously, since American Thanksgiving isn't celebrated in Japan, Black Friday doesn't exist here, either. It also helps that Christmas isn't nearly as big of a holiday as it is in the west (though they do celebrate it...with KFC and cake, from what I'm told; apparently, western holidays are supposed to be celebrated with western food). I went shopping today just because I could do it without fear of being trampled or mugged in the parking lot. Be safe, everyone!

I hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving and we are both very thankful for all of you!


Mexican dahlias
(These are much taller than me.)