Tag Japanese culture

How To Eat Sushi

eat-sushi

There’s a new sushi place in town, and I’ve been on a bit of a kick of having sushi for lunch. In the hot and humid weather especially, I get a hankering for it and will eat sushi a couple of times a week. Of course, if you’re not careful, you can wind up like Jeremy Piven and get mercury poisoning from eating too much sushi, but that dude was eating raw fish morning, noon, and night.

I am guilty of not straying too far from mainstream fish for my nigiri sushi — tuna, salmon, shrimp — although I do seriously love eel (unagi). But when I was at the new place a couple of weeks ago, the owner came over and chatted me up and convinced me to order the special of the day, a variation of “dragon roll”, which the chef had made jumbo-sized and included Alaskan king crab inside the roll. They were calling it “dinosaur roll”, but it looks like there’s no particular standard version of that. Anyway, the presentation, with the roll arranged to look like a sea monster on the plate, was utterly gorgeous; each piece had a different color of the tiny flying fish roe on top, with a bit of octopus suckers for the eyes. The combination of the teriyaki eel and the crab (which was mixed with mayo) made for a very rich dish, which is not what I expect from sushi generally, but was yummy as well as filling. My only disappointment was that I hadn’t brought a camera with me to take a picture of it to share with you.

Now, the dinosaur roll was flavorful enough on its own that I didn’t need to use any soy or wasabi to season it, and I saved the pickled ginger for the end to cleanse my palate, but when you eat ordinary nigiri sushi, there’s a right way and a wrong way to do it. This webpage has a full-page illustration of the dos-and-don’ts. My personal pet peeve is people who put the wasabi IN the soy sauce and muddle it all together. Sushi, like other items in Japanese cuisine, is all about individual components and how they interact, not mushing them all together like squishing peas into mashed potatoes.

I hope you’ll be informed by this illustration and inspired to go try some raw fish and hot wine at your earliest oppourtnity.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

I’m Not Gonna Try It, You Try It!

Mmm-MMM! It’s new Pepsi White, with the great taste of yogurt! Sort of.

I guess that cucumber-flavored Pepsi must not have gone over so well.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

More Interesting Than 99% Of MySpace Pages

This plant, which lives in a cafe in Japan and goes by the name of Midori-san, has its very own blog. (yes, of course I know it’s in Japanese, don’t be daft)

Accroding to this article in the London Daily Telegraph, the plant is fitted with assorted sensors that feed data about the plant’s general condition to a computer, which then posts the information in a “chatty” style on the blog.

As you can see in this video from the Telegraph, it looks like part of the setup that allows Midori-san to post to its blog is a Chumby, the little informational gizmo that I told you about right around this same time last year. I’d be interested to know what role the Chumby plays in the whole thing (it’s not mentioned in the video).

Of course, this is not the only blogging Plant(e) I know, but at least it posts every day. (Oh, snap!)

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Letters From A Japanese Crematorium

Via The Daily Undertaker, here is a non-fiction story by a writer named Marie Mutsuki Mockett entitled “Letters from a Japanese Crematorium”, as published in the online version of the literary magazine AGNI. It is a deeply personal story, but it is also a very interesting peek inside an element of Japanese culture that is generally kept private. Mockett is a Japanese-American, and the story conveys the duality that comprises her heritage as someone from a culture but not really of that culture.

The story appeared in the Spring 2007 issue of AGNI, and Mockett wrote about it here on her own blog, which includes many of her own photographs of the trip. I have borrowed her photo of the entry into the crematorium itself above. On her front page it says that her first novel, entitled “Picking Bones From Ash” is due out next year. Keep your eyes peeled.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

All Original Content Copyright © BrianKaneOnline
All Other Content Copyright © Its Original Authors

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress

Switch to our mobile site