Monday, February 25, 2013

Japanese food: How can something raw taste so delightful?



Image Source: pinterest.com


Japanese food is not just about taste, flavor, or aroma. Although most Japanese dishes are raw, Japanese cuisine still thrives in various parts of the world because of its cultural and nutritional values. Below are two of the most popular raw dishes of Japan:

Sashimi

Sashimi is basically thinly sliced fresh raw meat or fish, served with soy sauce and wasabi. Common garnishes of sashimi include shredded radish, ginger, and toasted nori. As online writer Terry Retter puts it: “Raw fish dipped in fabulous sauce is an authentic Japanese food that is hard to appreciate after only one bite. If you hate it, you probably haven't given yourself a chance to savor it deeply, or haven't given the dish a chance to sample you enough.” This all-time favorite comes in different varieties: salmon, puffer fish, tuna, chicken breast, and deer meat. Sashimi is best served with any noodle or rice entrée.


Image Source: gayot.com

Sushi

This article defines sushi as any dish made with vinegar rice, which may or may not include raw fish. There are also different types of sushi, including nigiri, gunkan, norimaki, temaki, and inari. Through the years, sushi has evolved into various forms like raw vegan sushi. 


Image Source: pbs.org


Part of enjoying Japanese cuisine is the person’s ability to appreciate its dishes at face value, and understand its cultural and nutritional worth.

JC Uni-tec’s website shares how you can make your own Japanese dishes at home.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Japanese cuisine: A fusion of art, taste, and health



Image Source: rivieragrillny.com


Japanese food transcends from just being food to being a wonder that encompasses the history and culture of Japan. There are Japanese dishes necessary for cultural events; some for local consumption whipped up in different weather conditions and locations; others for preservation purposes that have become a famous representation of Japanese cuisine. No matter how Japanese food is prepared and where it will be eaten, one thing is clear: Japanese food is a mix of art, taste, and health.

For the Japanese, every meal turns into a thing of beauty. The Japanese put effort into adding aesthetic appeal to their food. For them, stuffing the belly is not the only thing that’s important – enriching the senses is, too.


Image Source: newsonjapan.com


For foreigners who enjoy Japanese cuisine, everything is more delightful because of the visual presentation and the health benefits that Japanese food brings. More and more Americans are getting to appreciate Japanese food. Many kitchen equipment distributors in the country, including JC Uni-tec and N.A. Sales Company Inc., have made it a point to offer kitchen equipment that cater to lovers of Japanese cooking. Whether these kitchen equipment will be used at home or in high-end restaurants, all the products they offer are of high quality. JC Uni-tec, for instance, carries a line of sushi showcases created by Sanzen, which can be used to display beautiful and tasty sushi and sashimi, traditional Japanese food items that every restaurant must have.


Image Source: newsonjapan.com


Access this website for more information on Japanese cuisine.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

REPOST: Kyoto Cuisine

This article from Bento.com features the art of authentic Kyoto cuisine

KyotoKazuki.jp

An elegant banquet for a nobleman, a tea master's meticulous repast, the bare sustenance of a Zen priest, morsels to whet the appetite of a carousing samurai, simple fare for the working man - Kyo-ryori, or Kyoto cuisine, is an intriguing blend of a thousand years of history with as many exotic ingredients, from fresh fern greens to pickled herring to yuba.

Yuba is perhaps the quintessential Kyoto ingredient. Skimmed from open vats of steaming soy milk, yuba is served fresh with a light sauce, or dried in strips or rolls to be used later in soups and a variety of inventive ways. Almost pure protein, yuba is an important ingredient in Zen vegetarian cooking (as is fu, its glutinous wheat counterpart). The flavor is subtle, and indescribable; the texture, delicate. Yuba is a backdrop against which other ingredients play - the blank space that defines the culinary lines, a master's touch to a cuisine that is truly an art.

Image Source: Kyoto-Wel.com

The fusuma door slides open ... s-s-s-h-u-s-h. A maid kneels outside, bows, apologizes for the intrusion. You are seated on a pillow in a tatami room overlooking a garden. The sound of water trickling into a stone basin outside has helped to wash away the day's frustrations.

You have been sitting here, sipping the green tea, eating the small sweet that has gently awakened your appetite, exactly as it was intended. The first lacquered try of morsels appears just in time.

Kaiseki promises you'll never be bored. The meal you are served depends on the precise time of year. The best chefs guarantee their guests will never receive the same meal twice. In Kyoto, a meal is to be savored by more than the palate.

There is atmosphere in which to lavish, scenery to enjoy. There are gilt-edged bowls and inlaid-lacquer boxes whose craftsmanship, design, and color may also be imbibed. There are aromas brought one at a time to tantalize an appetite for the dish that follows.

Image Source: TripAdvisor.com

Kaiseki was designed to please emperors. It was refined and perfected by tea masters with a preference for simplicity and meticulous attention to the seasons. The Chinese characters (懐石)refer to the heated stones carried to bed inside the folds of the kimono of Zen monks, just enough to take the chill from their bellies. In the later centuries, kaiseki, written with less aesthetic characters (会席), became hors d'oeuvres served with sake for the merchant class out for a night of pleasure in the geisha houses of Gion.

No matter what the occasion, Kyoto-style kaiseki places importance on seasonal ingredients, whose flavor is to be enhanced gently, never to be overwhelmed by heavy spices or elaborate sauces. It is intended to be served graciously, enjoyed leisurely, and appreciated attentively. (Today, a kaiseki meal can be extremely costly, but it is an experience that does not have to be missed. For a person on a limited budget, a kaiseki bento, the "box lunch" supreme, will provide a delightful sampler of this magnificent cuisine.)

But Kyoto was more than aristocrats and playboys. The vast majority of people were farmers, shopkeepers, and craftsmen who never got near a kaiseki meal. Kyoto was a landlocked city, a two-day trek over the mountains to the sea. Fish had to be salted or pickled to be carried that far on foot by peddlers. Even vegetables had to be pickled to save them from perishing in the hot, sticky summers.

Image Source: KyotoFoodie.com

The people's cuisine of Kyoto was far from exotic. A bowl of barley rice, a few pickled vegetables, a bowl of miso soup - a bite of fish when times were good - and a cup of the plainest tea; humble fare, often vegetarian, as much of the population was Buddhist.

Shojin-ryori, Zen-style cooking, served in temples and vegetarian restaurants today, turned the simple sustenance of Buddhist priests - vegetables, rice, and soybeans - into a creative and interesting cuisine that is apparent in every aspect of Japanese cooking.

The cuisine that the painstaking monks evolved explored every imaginable use of its simple ingredients, especially of soybeans - a hundred ways to serve miso, soy sauce, tofu, and yuba, all rich in protein.

The same attention to visual beauty that other forms of Kyo-ryori possess is found in shojin-ryori, though not to such a lavish degree. Nothing should be wasted, and rather than costly porcelain, the monks each had their own stack of bowls, one fitting inside the other, wiped clean by the monk himself when the meal had been thankfully consumed.

The dimensions of Kyoto cuisine reflect the seasons and sensibilities of all the townspeople - from priest to bon vivant, from nobility to peasants.

JC Unitec is one of the major distributors of Japanese kitchen equipment in the United States. Its Facebook page offers more information about the company, its services, and other updates on Japanese cuisines.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Oyako donburi: A simple guide

Image Source: Kokotaru.com

Japanese food culture dates back to the Yayoi era, when the Japanese started cultivating and harvesting rice. Aside from rice being the staple food of the country, the Japanese are also known for their use of chicken, vegetables, and whatever nature brings them.

One popular Japanese rice dish is oyako donburi, translated as follows:

  • Oya means parent 
  • Ko means child 
  • Oyako is a single word for parent-and-child 
  • Donburi is a big bowl of rice topped with other ingredients

Oyako donburi literally means “family meal.” It is composed of rice, chicken meat, eggs, onions, and/or mushrooms. Below is a version of this all-time favorite dish from Food.com

Image Source: SumoKitchen.com

Chicken-eggs mixture

  • 12 ounces chicken breasts - deboned and skinned 
  • 4 eggs - beaten 
  • 4 shiitake mushrooms - dried 
  • 1 onion - thinly sliced

Sauce

  • 1/2 cup water 
  • 4 tablespoons soy sauce 
  • 3 tablespoons mirin (an essential rice wine used as condiment in Japanese cooking, similar to sake, but with a lower alcohol content) 
  • 1 tablespoon sugar 
  • 5 cups cooked rice
Procedure

  1. After cutting the chicken breast into thin slices, soften the shiitake mushrooms in lukewarm water. Remove hard parts and cut mushrooms in halves. 
  2. Mix all sauce ingredients in a skillet. Cover the skillet and bring to a boil. 
  3. Add the chicken, mushrooms, and onion. Cook over medium heat until chicken is tender. That should take about 4 minutes. Add the eggs and cover. In low heat, cook and let the eggs set, for about a minute. 
Image Source: Bunrab.com

Serving suggestion

Put about a cup of rice in a large bowl topped with the chicken-egg mixture. Finish with the sauce before serving.

Rice has transcended from just being food for the Japanese to becoming a ‘way of life.’ This is why companies like JC Uni-tec and N.A. Sales Company Inc., help provide households and restaurants with kitchen equipment that will make cooking rice and Japanese dishes easy and hassle-free.  

This website shares more information about Japanese cuisine.