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Showing posts with label Tokyo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tokyo. Show all posts

Friday, May 9, 2014

Tokyo vs. Paris, Japan vs. France, from a food point of view

paris-lamen.jpg Parisiens lining up outside a ramen (lamen in French) restaurant in Paris.

There’s an article in Food and Wine called 7 Reasons Why Tokyo Is the New Paris, and a post that follows up on that on the Wall Street Journal’s Japan RealTime blog titled Paris vs. Tokyo: Which Has Better Food and Drink?. As a Tokyo native who currently lives in France (although not in Paris), I thought I have some qualifications for adding my 2 cents on the subject. While the focus of both articles is on which city is “better” for an American tourist who is interested in food to visit, I’ll like to expand on that a bit.

I have to agree with the points raised by both articles to be honest. In Paris, you can get first rate French food, on all levels. If that’s what you are there for you will be in heaven. From 3-starred expensives temples to haute cuisine down to the humble baguette or croissant (although not all baguettes and croissants in Paris are automatically great; you still have to choose where you get them from) Paris does most French food really really well. I know, too obvious.

However…when it comes to most other cuisines, Paris, and France in general, doesn’t fare so well in my opinion, with the exception perhaps of food from North Africa, e.g. Moroccan. (Maybe also Vietnamese…although I haven’t have any Vietnamese food in Paris in more than a decade, so I’m not too sure about the current situation.) You can get quite decent versions of all kinds of cuisine, including Japanese (see A frugal eats (mostly Japanese) blitz through Paris). But is it first rate? Not really. If you limit things to European cities, you can get better Chinese food in London, better Indian food in London (or Zürich or Geneva for that matter), better Japanese food in London or Düsseldorf…and so on. (More about East Asian food in France later.)

So, if you want really great French food and only that, Paris is a great food city. If you want variety though…Tokyo beats it hands down. Yes, you can get very good french food in Japan, and not just from the expensive starred restaurants either. There are little, unassuming bistros and such scattered around the city (in Kagurazaka for instance, where there’s a small French expat community and a lycée) You can also fine top class French pastry, and top class French or European style bread too. In general, international cuisine is much better in Tokyo than it is in Paris. And of course, you can get great Japanese food - the best in the world - in all price ranges in Tokyo. What I’m saying really is that French food in Tokyo is a lot better than Japanese food in Paris.

While there aren’t any picturesque open-air food markets in Tokyo, what makes up for them and then some are the wondrous food halls in most of the major department stores, where you can gawk at everything from pristine produce displays to pastries from the top patisseries in the world — including some major French ones like Pierre Hermé. And no one is going to scold you for merely pointing at a sexy mango or fondling a melon…

If you are only going to the cities and not exploring the rest of the country at all (which is…silly), then I have to say Paris wins hands down. Paris is dripping with history and elegance and Culture. It survived two world wars and various smaller skirmishes fairly intact, so the Paris of Baron Haussmann as he designed it in the 18th century is still there. Another thing is that international tourism is supremely important for Paris, and France in general, and there are all sorts of ways in which the tourist is accommodated. Plus, Paris is one of the best museum cities in the world.

Old Tokyo (Edo), which must have been a really nice place to walk around judging from the hundreds of woodblock prints and so on that exist, was destroyed by a major earthquake and heavy wartime bombing in the first half of the 20th century. So most of the Tokyo you see is modern. Many people love the ‘Blade Runner’-esque parts of Tokyo, but many do not. The more traditional parts of the city were rebuilt in recent decades. So its history does not hit you in the face. Furthermore, tourism is not that important for Tokyo’s economy (and Japan as a whole has been sluggish about promoting itself to international tourists until fairly recently). So to experience the Japan of the past, most tourists include Kyoto, and some other well-preserved places like Nikko and Kamakura and so on, in their itineraries.

Tokyo in many ways is a city that looks more towards the future than the past, at least on the surface…although it has a fascinating, rich history too. It’s just not as in-your-face as it in Paris.

As far as how you will fare as a tourist who does not speak the language of either country with the natives…I don’t really have first-hand knowledge of that since I speak Japanese (^_^;) and French (at least enough for everyday life; plus The Guy is totally fluent). Maybe you can tell me about your experiences?

I have to admit, I’m not a big coffee person. I prefer tea, and only have coffee once every couple of weeks or so. But I see that both articles make a big deal about the poor quality of coffee in Paris. I think they kind of protest too much, but it is true that the coffee you get served at the most famous cafés is quite uniformly mediocre. You might as well order a Cola Light or something really, if the taste of your beverage is so important to you. But surely you do not go to Les Deux Magots or Café de Flore or something for the coffee, do you? No, you go there to soak up the atmosphere and bask in the knowledge that Hemingway or Colette or Picasso used to hang around there too.

There are really no such world famous cafés in Tokyo. But, you can indeed get great coffee, and enjoy cafés with great atmosphere and idiosyncratic decor and so on. Plus, for your basic caffeine-infusion needs you can find a myriad of large-cup coffee chains like Starbucks and its competitors, just like back home. You can’t really find that easily all around Paris or France.

One thing to keep in mind about “cafés” in Japan (as well as kissaten, which are kind of old-fashioned cafés) is that many serve delicious light meals, that the owners put a lot of effort into. A “café style” dish means it’s elegantly presented but not too fancy. Cafés are food-fashion leaders in Japan. In France, cafés are social centers more than they are about the coffee or the food.

In my experience, both have top notch basic ingredients. We can get sashimi grade fish here from our village fish shop, and the locally produced fruit and vegetables are terrific. There’s a difference in what kinds of vegetables you can get of course, but you can live with that.

There are some basic ingredients that one country does better than the other however. Most are pretty obvious, but others may be surprising…?

Cheese: It’s a bit puzzling to me how mediocre and expensive cheese is in Japan, given that people have embraced other European cuisines so enthusiastically. This is slowly changing for sure, but all in all, in the cheese department France is the clear winner. Dairy in general: This is surprisingly close. Japan has a pretty big dairy industry, especially in Hokkaido, and people have been drinking milk and eating other dairy products for a few generations now. But you can’t really beat the quality of good quality French dairy products, such as the cultured butter, the cream, and so on. (Again, you have to look for it…there’s plenty of mediocre crap at the supermarchés.)Wine: The appreciation of wine in Japan is growing by leaps and bounds, but people definitely don’t have the intimate, everyday, part-of-life relationship with wine they have in France. (Especially where I live, which is a major wine producing region.) Tofu, and any kind of East Asian ingredients.: While there are a few Japanese groceries in France (most in Paris), overall it’s difficult to get really good ingredients here, even by mailorder, unless you pay way too much. (Disclosure: I order most of my Japanese ingredients from Japan Centre in London, because it’s cheaper even with the extra shipping.) There is a supermarket called Paristore which carries East Asian (mostly Chinese) and some South Asian ingredients, and they dominate the Asian ingredient-supply chain. Unfortunately, their quality is mediocre to truly horrible. I absolutely hate their frozen dumplings…which are served at every sad Asian buffet a volonté (all-you-can-eat buffet) place around here, ugh. Tofu is available at health food stores and such…but it’s just bad. Obviously, Japanese and general Asian ingredients are way better in Japan. Western herbs: There’s still rather limited knowledge of how to use western herbs in Japan I think. Dried herbs sold at the supermarket and things tend to be quite expensive and flavorless. Recipes often just call for “herbs” (???), without specifying which herb - unthinkable! This is changing though; more people grow their own herb plants and so on. Honey: Honey in France is generally rich and full of flavor. You can really taste the difference between lavender honey or acacia honey or chestnut flower honey and so on. Honey in Japan is like sugar syrup - thin, colorless, and tasteless. And very expensive.

If you are only talking about the food, I would say Japan.

However, there are plenty of other reasons why someone lives where they live. I’ve toyed with the idea of moving back to Japan permanently, but for now I’m happy where I am, in this peaceful corner of France (tourists notwithstanding). I am just very lucky that I get to “live” in both places. ^_^


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Monday, May 6, 2013

Tokyo Travel Tips & Pretty Good Number One eBook Giveaway

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April 25, 2013Tokyo Travel Tips & Pretty Good Number One eBook GiveawayUkai Tofu Ya, tofu vendors at Tsukiji market, Tokyo Tower, a dish from tofu omakase lunch
Soon after Asian Tofuwas released last year, Matthew Amster-Burton tweeted that he’d used the bookto make fresh yuba tofu skin. He went a couple of rounds with it and then toldme that the DIY yuba experience was good preparation for his trip to Japan. Iwas both flattered and surprised because there are so many wonderful things toeat in Japan and Matthew, a talented writer based in Seattle, was extrakeen on tofu.

As it turned out, Matthew had a purpose. He and his wife, Laurie, and eight-year-old daughter, Iris, spent a month in Tokyo last summer. They renteda one-room apartment about the size of a single-car garage and ventured out on dailyeating adventures.

Matthew recounted their experiences in his new book, Pretty Good Number One, a fast-paced,rollicking work that’s chock full of delicious humor and insights. Reading theebook at bedtime was my way of reliving and deepening my understanding ofTokyo. I’d gone there in 2010 to research tofu and a number of the places Ivisited and food people I know are part of Matthew’s book. I was honored to bethe lead on his tofu chapter.

Pretty-good-number-one
Matthew’s vivid and spot-on description of Tokyo led me tospend a few hours reviewing photos from my Tokyo trip. They’re part of thecollages on this post. The book was such a terrific read that I had to askMatthew a few questions about his work and of course, what to do and where toeat in Tokyo.

Whet your appetite below and then enter the giveaway. Thereare three (3) copies of the book available!

One of the charming aspects of your books is the relationship thatyou and Iris have built around food adventures. Parents bond with their kidsover many shared interests but is there something different when food isinvolved? Or am I just biased?

I think there is something different, but having written two bookson the topic, I’m also biased. It’s nice to bond with your kids over foodbecause adults and children can enjoy it in the same way, and because foodisn’t optional. If you’re going to be eating with your kid two or three times aday anyway, why not try to find a way to make it fun?

You were in Tokyo for a month but the balanced insights youprovide about the city, its culture, and food make it seem like you were therefor years. Each chapter is jammed packed. What was a typical day like for youwhile you were in Tokyo?

Thanks for the compliment. I’d start most days writing at theStarbucks in our western Tokyo neighborhood, Nakano. I felt a little sillygoing to Starbucks in Tokyo, since we have one or two locations in Seattle, butmost sit-down cafes in Tokyo don’t open before 10 a.m. Then I’d often meet upwith Iris and Laurie at Mister Donut, an amazing doughnut chain whose signaturePon de Ring doughnut is made with mochi. We’d head out into Tokyo by train foran adventure (a museum, shopping, the 634-meter Tokyo Skytree tower) and lunch,and then come back to Nakano for dinner at home or a restaurant.

But there were plenty of atypical days. One day we got up early tohave breakfast at Tsukiji fish market; another day we took the Shinkansen outof town to a small city that boasts hundreds of gyoza (fried dumpling)restaurants, including one that serves 74 different fillings.

We tried hard not to overdo it, and most days we succeeded. Onething I want readers to understand about Tokyo is that there’s much more to thecity than the popular images of neon-lit nightlife and tranquil temple gardens.Walking around in the streets of Tokyo is delightful. The city is exuberantlymodern and celebrates street life, yes, but at the same time you’re never farfrom a place to pause and relax. Because of this, Tokyo was less likely to giveme that wrung-out traveler’s malaise than most other places I’ve been.

There are people who say that Vietnamese food in the U.S. isbetter or just as good as the food in Vietnam. People don’t say that aboutJapanese food. Why is Japanese food so incredibly superior in Japan than it iselsewhere?

Japan has the most fully developed restaurant culture I’ve ever seen.Have you ever been to a food truck pod in Portland, OR, where a dozen or morefood trucks congregate, each focusing on a specific dish? Japan doesn’t havefood trucks, but it was doing tiny specialized restaurants long before Portlandgot hip.

One night, for example, we had dinner at a restaurant famous fornose-to-tail eating. It only serves freshwater eel, mostly grilled on a stick.So we ate eel fillets wrapped around burdock root, eel liver, smoked eel, and(Iris’s favorite) crispy fried eel backbones. Japanese diners expect andappreciate this level of focus: literally everyone in the eel restaurant wasordering and enjoying the all-parts-of-the-eel set meal.

In the U.S., this level of specialization tends to be reserved forAmerican food (e.g., steakhouses) and food trucks. Ethnic restaurants (for lackof a better term), even very good ones, tend to get stuck serving a greatesthits collection from a national cuisine too big to fit on a single menu. AndJapanese cuisine is really big. There’s no such thing as a “Japaneserestaurant” in Tokyo, but there are a hundred different kinds of Japaneserestaurants.

 

Tokyo collage 2A tiny glimpse of Tokyo food (from top left to right): Tuna at Tsukiji market, cream puffs at a Tokyo market, tofu (okara) donuts at a depachika, and adorable sweets
There are so many wonderful things to eat in Tokyo. How did yousettle on the ones for the book? For example, I was flattered to be included inthe tofu chapter but at the same time I also wondered, why tofu?

 

Tokyo is always topping “World’s Most Expensive City” lists, buthaving spent a month living and eating there, I can’t figure out why. You canget any number of amazing meals for under $10—especially noodles, but alsotakoyaki (octopus balls), bento, yakitori, rice balls, and so on. Once Irealized how well I could eat for $10, it was hard to get too excited about oneof those $300 sushi meals food writers are always gushing about.

So I decided the book would focus on the everyday food of Tokyo,and tofu is an important part of that. Even so, one of the most expensive mealsI ate was at Ukai Tofu-ya, the same fancy tofu restaurant you visited in AsianTofu, and I describe in the book how they served me one of the best thingsI’ve ever tasted (fresh tofu made from plump, Hokkaido-grown soybeans) and oneof the most challenging (a mucilaginous green called junsai). These wereserved together in the same bowl. I love the idea of a high-end tofurestaurant, and the meal was delicious, beautifully presented, and sometimesway outside my comfort zone. That’s a good thing, right?

There were a few dishes I wanted to cover in the book and just ranout of time, like Japanese curry and somen noodles, and others that I need torevisit in more detail, like soba, sushi, and ramen. And, of course, there aresome great winter dishes, like tofu hot pot (yudofu) and fish cake stew(oden)  that we didn’t try because we were in Tokyo duringthe sticky furnace of July. Is it too early to hint that this oversight will beremedied?

If a first-time visitor to Tokyo wanted a true experience with aminimum of “vacation head”, what do you advise them to do in say, 2 or 3 days?

Vacation Head is a disease introduced to me by my friend BeckySelengut, author of the cookbook Good Fish. You come down with it whenyou go on vacation to a new place and, because your brain is addled by jetlagand the sudden lifting of all your usual responsibilities, you decide thatyou’ve landed in paradise. The food! The people! The scenery! It’s all perfect!Japan is notorious for causing bad cases of Vacation Head, and that’s notnecessarily a bad thing; it’s only bad when someone else gets it and you haveto sit through their holiday slideshow.

Tokyo is the world’s biggest city, and you can’t see all of it ina few days, a month, a year, or a lifetime. So you’ll have to prioritize.Here’s what I think no food-loving visitor should miss:
A visit to a depachika. Every department store in Tokyo has a food hallin the basement, and they offer the most outrageous high-end food shopping youcan possibly imagine. A typical depachika has dozens of stalls staffed byvendors selling sashimi, bento boxes, pickles, tea, rice dishes, Japanesesweets, salumi, French pastry (including big names like Pierre Hermé). Ifyou’ve been to Harrods or Fauchon, you’ve experienced just the barest hint of adepachika. The best I visited were at Isetan in Shinjuku and Takashimaya inNihonbashi.Shibuya Crossing. This is the famously busy pedestrian crossingseen in countless photos and movies set in Tokyo. Seeing a photo is nothingcompared to getting caught up in the crush yourself, especially on a rainy daywhen you’ll be lost in a sea of umbrellas. And Shibuya is a bustlingneighborhood home to plenty of great restaurants and shopping once you gettired of crossing the street.An izakaya meal. An izakaya is a Japanese pub, the kind oflively drinking and eating place where people hang out with coworkers andfriends after work, often for hours. Izakaya food is simple, diverse, andusually salty and tangy to go well with beer, sake, or shochu. Think sashimi,salt-broiled fish, stir-fried beef with tofu, mountain vegetable salad withmiso, and, in summer, a simple sliced ripe tomato. Nothing about the izakayaexperience travels well outside of Japan, so enjoy it while you’re there. Ifyou can go with a local, do so, but if not, go anyway and order by pointing andshrugging. (Some chain izakayas have picture menus, and chain restaurants inJapan are often great.)Tempura cooked to order. One of the Tokyo dining experiences I miss mostis sitting at the counter in a neighborhood restaurant while a chef cooks uspieces of perfectly fried tempura. We’d order onion, kabocha squash, and lotusroot, watch him cook, and pause to drink and enjoy the vegetables. Then we’dorder again: shrimp, whitebait, and a whole freshwater eel, slaughtered andfilleted before our eyes. We’d banter with the chef and fellow customers asmuch as our limited common language allowed, and keep ordering food until wecouldn’t manage any more. Why aren’t American cities full of tempura bars?

How do you categorize your book? Is it a travel memoir or aguidebook or both? How should a reader employ Pretty Good Number One for exploring Tokyo?
It’s definitely a travel memoir, but I’ve been delighted to hear from somereaders that they’re using the book to help plan their own Tokyo trip. The factthat it’s an ebook and can easily live on your phone or e-reader probablyencourages that.

I love reading guidebooks, but they’re often out of date evenbefore they go on sale. The approach I tried to take in Pretty Good NumberOne is to focus on the kind of food experiences you can have in Tokyo evenif all the specific restaurants and shops I mention in the book go out ofbusiness. This is an absurdly egotistical thing to hope for, but if someonewere to read my book 25 years from now, they could say, “Now I want to go to acat cafe, and cook my own okonomiyaki pancakes at a tabletop grill, and shop ata depachika, and eat a bento box while riding the train at 186 mph.” And ofcourse they’ll be able to. This being the future, however, possibly the tempurachefs will be replaced by robots.

The Giveaway Lowdown:

Prize: 3 copies of Pretty Good Number One by Matthew Amster-BurtonWhois eligible to enter: Anyone with an email address and willingness to read adigital bookHowto enter: Simplyleave a comment on this post. What’s your favorite Japanese food? Include youremail address sothat I can contact you directly if you win.Canyou enter more than once? Yes, if you’re a fan of the VWK Facebook page,follow me on Twitter orhave joined me on Pinterest,you can enter an extra time for each of those social media networks. If we’rebuddies on all three, then shoot, you can enter 4 times. If you’re doingmultiple entries, let me know who you are by including something like [FB],[Twitter], or [Pinterest] in your comment.Deadlineto enter: Friday,May 3, 2013, noon (PST)Selection,notification, and claiming the tickets: The three winners will be randomly selected viaRandom.org and notified by email. The winners will be announced on Tuesday, May7. Because the book is available in different ebook formats, the winners willindividually coordinate with Matthew on how to receive the book. If you’d likemore details, read the officialgiveaway rules.

Good luck! 

Related posts -- Matthew mentions certain dishes in his book that got me thinking about these recipes on VWK:

Japanese Octopus Dumpling (Takoyaki) (on Asian Dumpling Tips)Cold Udon (zaru udon) (great eating in Tokyo's sweltering summer)Udon with Clams and Shiitake Mushroom (a Tokyo-style izakaya dish)Posted in Books, Recipes: All, Recipes: Dumplings, Recipes: Japanese, Recipes: Noodles, Travel |

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Comments Tokyo Travel Tips & Pretty Good Number One eBook Giveaway Ukai Tofu Ya, tofu vendors at Tsukiji market, Tokyo Tower, a dish from tofu omakase lunch
Soon after Asian Tofuwas released last year, Matthew Amster-Burton tweeted that he’d used the bookto make fresh yuba tofu skin. He went a couple of rounds with it and then toldme that the DIY yuba experience was good preparation for his trip to Japan. Iwas both flattered and surprised because there are so many wonderful things toeat in Japan and Matthew, a talented writer based in Seattle, was extrakeen on tofu.

As it turned out, Matthew had a purpose. He and his wife, Laurie, and eight-year-old daughter, Iris, spent a month in Tokyo last summer. They renteda one-room apartment about the size of a single-car garage and ventured out on dailyeating adventures.

Matthew recounted their experiences in his new book, Pretty Good Number One, a fast-paced,rollicking work that’s chock full of delicious humor and insights. Reading theebook at bedtime was my way of reliving and deepening my understanding ofTokyo. I’d gone there in 2010 to research tofu and a number of the places Ivisited and food people I know are part of Matthew’s book. I was honored to bethe lead on his tofu chapter.

Pretty-good-number-one
Matthew’s vivid and spot-on description of Tokyo led me tospend a few hours reviewing photos from my Tokyo trip. They’re part of thecollages on this post. The book was such a terrific read that I had to askMatthew a few questions about his work and of course, what to do and where toeat in Tokyo.

Whet your appetite below and then enter the giveaway. Thereare three (3) copies of the book available!

Stay Connected                    Asian Tofu in the News"A whole cookbook devoted to tofu? Yes, please."
— Kate Williams, Serious Eats 2012 Favorite Cookbooks

"Cooking with Tofu (Are You Serious?!)"
— Michael Rulhman on his tofu conversion

"This book should be a priority for anyone with the slightest interest in Asian cuisines."
— Anne Mendelson, Taste & Travel

"The most gratifying part about cooking from Asian Tofu is that all the recipes work the way they’re written."
— T. Susan Chang, Boston Globe

Book info, reviews, radio & TV . . .Classes & Events1/2 day @Cakebreadwines, Rutherford
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Sunday, September 25, 2011

The "Indo Karii" at Nakamuraya in Shinjuku, Tokyo plus the three degrees of curry hotness

One more about curry! Since some of you asked for this, here’s how to figure out which level of hotness a curry mix is, if you get one that has Japanese packaging. You’ll also get to learn a few kanji characters!

This is amakuchi or “mild”. It literally means “sweet mouth”.

curry-amakuchi.png

This one is chuukara or “medium hot”.

curry-chuukara.png

And this is karakuchi or “hot” - or, literally “hot (spicy) mouth”. Notice that it uses the same kara ? kanji from chuukara and the kuchi kanji from amakuchi?

curry-karakuchi.png

The above three are the standard levels of hotness. In recent years you may occasionally encounter the kanji below. Read gekikara (notice the 2nd kanji is kara for “hot” or “spicy” again), it means “extremely (or dramatically) hot”. You can expect this to be very very spicy.

curry-gekikara.png

While we’re at it, here’s another kanji combo (not related to curry) you might see around Japan. Notice it uses the same ? character as gekikara. Read gekiyasu, it means “extremely cheap” and denotes something that’s on sale, or, well, being sold cheap (according to the seller).

gekiyasu.png

By the way, my favorite restaurant curry in Japan is available at the venerable Shinjuku Nakamuyara main restaurant in Shinjuku, Tokyo. Like Taimeiken in Nihonbashi, Rupa in the main Shinjuku Nakamuraya building is a shinise yoshoku (Western style Japanese cuisine) restaurant (they also have some chuuka or Japanese-style Chinese dishes too), that has been in business for more than 80 years. Unlike Taimeiken though, whose operation is basically limited to 2 restaurants and a deli counter at the nearby Mitsukoshi, Shinjuku Nakamuraya has expanded considerably since its humble origins. The company now manufactures and sells snacks, baked and packaged goods via various department stores and other places, as well as operating 20 restaurants and bakeries. Their steamed buns (nikuman and anpan) are even more famous than their curry. While I think there are better manjuu to be had elsewhere, their curry remains a personal favorite after all these years.

The main Shinjuku Nakamuraya building, which houses 3 restaurants, a tea salon, a casual bakery, and a food boutique, has been open at the same address in busy Shinjuku since 1909. Here’s their storefront. Most people head to Rupa, the retro-casual yet still elegant (white glove service) yoshoku/chuuka restaurant on the 2nd floor (1st floor for Europeans).

nakamuraya-kanban.jpg

nakamuraya-kanban2.jpg

The walls right in front of the Rupa restaurant entrance are lined with velvet-lined, glass-front showcases that display family photographs and models of the food to be had within.

nakamuraya-showcase.jpg

And this is their most famous dish, chicken indo karii (???·???) You’ll notice that the they write the ‘curry’ part as karii as opposed to the usual kareh. It turns out there’s a reason for this. While ‘rice curry’ was initially called “karii” in Japan, it gradually changed to “kareh”. But the Nakamuya founders were actually basing their curry recipe on one from India. One of their daughters married Rash Behari Bose, a leader of the Indian Independence Movement who was living in exile in Japan. Bose joined the Nakamuraya company as an executive and introduced ‘real’ Indian recipes to the family. They’ve stuck to the “karii” way of pronouncing “curry” ever since, probably to differentiate it from the increasingly European-style curry served elsewhere.

nakamuraya-curry1.jpg

As a child, going to Shinjuku Nakamuraya was a big treat for me. We used to live in Hachioji, on the Chuo (Central) line, and Shinjuko was the big ‘outings’ town for us. While my mom and sister sampled the whole menu, I stubbornly stuck to the same choices time after time: Indo Karii, followed by a big chocolate parfait. (I wish I still have my 10-year old self’s metabolism, that’s for sure.) I finally made my way back to Nakamuraya last year, and while I skipped the chocolate parfait dessert, I made sure to have the Indo Karii. It was almost exactly as I remembered it; the curry served in an elegant sauce boat, with fukujinzuke, rakkyo and some vegetable pickles, plus grated Parmesan cheese, on the side. And the rice, of course.

nakamuraya-curry2.jpg

When I tasted it though, I had a strange revelation. This curry didn’t taste like Japanese curry at all. In fact it tasted very similar to the curry dishes I got from my local Indial takeout - especially their korma, though a bit more spicy. What do you know? My favorite childhood curry turns out to be as “authentic” an Indian-type curry as you could get in Japan in those days.

Shinjuku Nakamuraya is scheduled to close down their whole main store for major renovations on October 19, 2011, to reopen in 2014. But they will be operating a temporary store on the 6th floor of the Takano building, which is right around the corner. As a matter of fact, Nakamuraya’s Indo Karii followed by a fruity dessert from Takano Fruit Parlor, another Tokyo shinise, sounds like a great lunch to me.

Shinjuku Nakamuraya official website (Japanese only) Shinjuku Nakamuraya main store - until October 19, 2011: Shinjuku 3-26-13. Exit from the East entrance of JR Shinjuku station and walk 3 minutes, or the A-6 exit from the Shinjuku Metro station. Open 11:30 - 22:00. Rupa does not take reservations. Takano building - from November 15, 2011: The temporary restaurant will be on the 6th floor. I’ll post the opening hours when they’re posted on the official web site. The Takano Building is located at Shinjuku 3-26-13, right next to the Nakamuraya building. (Same public transportation).

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Monday, December 13, 2010

Snapdragon Tokyo Teriyaki Rice Pasta Stir-Fry, 7.7-Ounce Boxes (Pack of 6)

Snapdragon Tokyo Teriyaki Rice Pasta Stir-Fry, 7.7-Ounce Boxes (Pack of 6)Journey to the culinary capitals of Asia with Snapdragon, where every stop brings a new taste discovery. Rice Pasta Stir-Fry are pure Asian rice noodles with authentic sauces and seasonings. Snapdragon Tokyo Teriyaki Stir-Fry is our adaptation of the classic teriyaki - sweet, smoky and a touch of salt.

Price: $22.14


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