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#japanesecuisine
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Outofcontroltbr
Japan: The Cookbook | Nancy Singleton Hachisu
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Finally found the perfect tray for my Japanese tea set ❤️

CaitZ Pretty 2y
5 likes1 comment
review
SoniaC
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Pickpick

Got some great ideas and inspiration to do more cooking. Not really vegetarian friendly but I know how to modify so worth my time. Beautiful photos.

tpixie Fun! 5y
Graciouswarriorprincess It looks great! 5y
51 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
Clwojick
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Pickpick

This was a interesting book to say the least! I have always been intrigued by bento boxes, and have always wanted to know more about them. So I jumped on the opportunity when I seen this available on NetGalley. I was not let down! The recipes all sound delicious, and relatively easy to attempt. I absolutely love how the pages were laid out, and I will admit that the colorful photography had me sitting here drooling. 🤤 #NetGalleyReadathon 4/30

marleed So my last bento box experience was in a darkened restaurant. I mistook the dollop of wasabi for quacomole. Yep, swallowed it whole. Unlike chili peppers it burns your nose before your mouth. Note to self: don‘t be the stories your son brings back to his office. 5y
Clwojick @marleed OH NO! Wasabi is the absolute worst! I used to work in a sushi restaurant, and once a week we‘d all have to challenge each other to see who had to make the wasabi for the week. We had to make gigantic batches, and the only way to get a smooth consistency is to mix the fine powder with boiling water. Needless to say the steam rises and so does the burning wasabi powder. It gets in your nose, your mouth, your eyes. ⬇️⬇️⬇️ 5y
Clwojick @marleed I would leave work with my mascara streaked down my face, and my husband (then boyfriend) would just be like... Did you pull the shirt stick on wasabi day again? Hahaha they ended up installing a huge fan to blow directly in you face so it wasn‘t so bad 5y
marleed Oh my goodness I would laugh at that story but unfortunately I know better! 5y
70 likes4 stack adds4 comments
review
Lindy
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Pickpick

Heaps of fascinating info in recipe headers & sidebars! The biggest drawback to this #cookbook is the lack of illustrations. The page above is the only one that demonstrates any technique. There are many complicated steps to most of the recipes, so some prior experience with Japanese cooking would help. Still, I learned so much & feel more prepared for the shojin ryori (Buddhist temple) meals I will encounter on my visit to Japan next year.

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Lindy
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Kitchen Culture: Heavenly Arrangement
Finely shredded vegetables are often coaxed into mounds that narrow at the top, like peaked mountains pointing towards the heavens. This plating style is called ten mori in Japanese, literally “heavenly arrangement.” It makes an impressive presentation, allowing relatively small amounts of food to look quite substantial.
(Pictured: Granny‘s Sun-Dried Radish; photography by Leigh Beisch)

ephemeralwaltz Yummy! 5y
Lindy @ephemeralwaltz I‘ve only tried one recipe so far; it was pretty tasty. 5y
Soubhiville Wow that looks amazing! 5y
Lindy @Soubhiville Yes! I added a note to include the cookbook‘s photographer. 5y
42 likes4 comments
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Lindy
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Hajikami Su-Zuké
Many plant foods have natural coloration that can be heightened through pickling. These pickles are aptly called hajikami from the noun hazukashii, which means “embarrassment,” and indeed these pickles blush deeply!

ephemeralwaltz Aww how interesting! Love it! 5y
Lindy @ephemeralwaltz The recipe headers and sidebars have a lot of interesting information. 😊 5y
48 likes2 comments
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Lindy
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Sample instructions: “Rub cucumbers one at a time with the salt, using the ita-zuri technique. Rinse the cucumbers (a greenish foam typically forms on the palms) & pat dry. Slice off stem ends & grate each cucumber, preferably on a ceramic grater to avoid a metallic taste. Line a small strainer with paper towels & allow grated cucumber to drain, saving the liquid to mellow the tartness of your dressing if need be. Add half the grated cucumber to…

Lindy …to the dressing, stir to mix, and pour over salad. Garnish with a mound of remaining grated cucumber.” (edited) 5y
saresmoore Oh, my, yes. Sounds amazing! 5y
julesG This kind of sounds familiar. I'm sure my paternal grandmother did something like that. 5y
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Lindy @julesG Interesting! Was your paternal grandmother Japanese? In the novel I just finished, the Russian Ukrainian characters eat cucumbers every day and now I‘m reading one set in Pakistan where the kids eat cucumbers in the garden. 5y
Lindy @saresmoore 🥒💚 5y
julesG No, my paternal grandmother was very German. But I do remember the salt rubbing of cucumbers, the grating and the straining. 5y
Lindy @julesG All this talk of cucumbers makes me want some. I‘m so suggestible. 5y
julesG Just come on over, I have a few at home. We have some nearly every evening. Practically a staple in my home. 5y
saresmoore Cucumbers are becoming your jacaranda! This, if it‘s a message from the Universe, is at least clear: eat more cucs! 5y
Lindy @julesG I still have two from a local greenhouse that sells at the farmers market. They will be part of my supper. 😊 5y
Lindy @saresmoore Ha! Cukes and jellyfish: what an odd combination in my reading this year. 5y
26 likes11 comments
blurb
Lindy
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Many things about this Japanese #cookbook baffle me. How to sauté vegetables using only 1/4 teaspoon of sesame oil, for example. Skillet-Seared Daikon with Yuzu (pictured above) sounds delicious, but in this case it‘s the portions that are a puzzle. Each person gets two slices of radish, 1/4-inch thick and two inches across. This is described as “a satisfying main course.” I would get skinny with this as my cooking bible.

saresmoore Huh, I‘m a pretty small adult and that portion sounds like a satisfying snack. That‘s practically an amuse bouche! 5y
Lindy @saresmoore Yes, a snack. Which reminds me of something from a different book: when a library security guard tells a woman who‘s eating crackers that eating isn‘t allowed in the library, she says she isn‘t eating; she‘s snacking. 5y
saresmoore Ahaha! I like that. 5y
39 likes3 comments
blurb
Lindy
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I wish this #cookbook had more photos of the prepared dishes. Arranging this one to look like a landscape sounds fiddly and I‘ve no intention of trying it, but I‘m curious how it‘s supposed to look.

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Lindy
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The name of this dish, Heaven & Earth, is a euphemism for kitchen scraps, namely the tops (heaven) & bottoms (earth) of produce: tender leafy celery tops; tougher leek tops; mushroom stems; carrot & daikon peels; stubby ends of lotus & burdock root, parsnips, rutabaga & bitter melon. All sorts of neglected or remaindered vegetable bits can be transformed into lovely, lacy-crisp, colourful tempura pancakes.

Lindy @queerbookreader Claire, I‘m tagging you on this because you‘re the only other Litten who has posted about this #cookbook. Did you ever get a copy? 5y
queerbookreader @Lindy I didn't 😭😭 I have to be really selective of books I ask for holidays so I haven't gotten a copy yet. How do you like it??? 5y
Lindy @queerbookreader It‘s okay. I‘m learning a lot about Japanese ingredients and cooking techniques, but the recipes have too many complicated steps, plus a fair bit of deep frying, so I haven‘t been tempted to try more than one recipe, so far. 5y
43 likes2 stack adds3 comments