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Showing posts with label Whats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Whats. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2013

What's so healthy about Japanese food?

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A lot of people who come to this site or JustBento are here because they think Japanese cooking is very healthy. By and large it is, but, like any cuisine it’s not 100% healthy by any means. I’ve been thinking about what parts of Japanese cuisine are indeed healthy, and what aren’t, following up on my previous posts about sushi here and here. Here’s what I have come up with.

The biggest health issue with Japanese cuisine may be that it’s centered around refined carbohydates, in the form of white rice, noodles made white flour, and bread - most of the bread consumed in Japan is as white as snow. Some people think soba noodles are healthier than other types of noodles, and while buckwheat (soba) may have some beneficial qualities, most of the soba you can get, especially the dried kind, contains a lot of white wheat flour (buckwheat on its own is pretty hard to form into thin noodles). Japanese cuisine is quite high in salt. Condiments like soy sauce are quite salty of course, but there are lots of salt-preserved foods like umeboshi, pickled, salt-cured vegetables and fish. Salt was very important as a preservative before the widespread adoption of canning and refrigeration, as were drying/dehydrating, smoking and sugar. Until fairly recently the leading cause of death in Japan was by diseases related to high blood pressure, such as stroke. (Both my maternal grandparents died of stroke-related complications.) If you don’t have blood pressure problems you don’t have to worry too much about salt probably, but if you do it is an issue. Modern Japanese cuisine, from the Meiji period on, has quite a lot of battered, breaded and deep fried foods. Tempura has been around for a while, and it’s been joined by things like tonkatsu, ebifurai (breaded deep fried shrimp), korokke (Japanese croquettes), menchikatsu and more. Sugar is used quite a lot in savory dishes. Mostly it’s used in tiny amounts, but some dishes are quite sugary even if they are savory. (One reason for could be that traditionally, Japanese meals did not have a dessert course; sweet things were eaten as in-between meal snacks.) Although a spoonful at a time of budo mame will not hurt me too much, I do have to limit my intake of it severely. Some of the most popular Japanese dishes around the world are sadly not that healthy. Besides the issues with sushi, ramen for example is wheat noodles in a fairly fatty (but oh so tasty) broth; tonkatsu is, as mentioned above, breaded and deep-fried; and Japanese curry is basically a hearty European style stew served over a big mound of white rice.

Two foods that are integral part of Japanese cooking are tofu and green tea. Tofu is a great source of vegetable based protein, that has been eaten for hundreds if not thousands of years in East Asian countries. However, when people take the idea behind tofu and consume massive amounts of it, in the form of soy protein isolate and so on, it may or may not cause some problems. I do feel there’s quite a lot of bad science around this issue, too. Western anti-soy/tofu advocates tend to underreport the typical amounts of tofu that Japanese or Chinese people traditionally eat (it’s not that uncommon to eat a whole block of it at a meal by yourself for example), but it’s really hard to over-eat plain tofu the way you can over-dose perhaps on protein shakes and the like.

Green tea has also been consumed in East Asia for quite a long time. Green tea has been given all kinds of amazing health benefits - mainly in the West. In the countries where drinking green tea is part of the culture, people don’t really think about the health benefits; they just drink it because it’s enjoyable. I’m always rather suspicious about things that are purported to have amazing health benefits, because it seems to me that the more exotic and foreign or just plain odd something is, the most miraculous it’s supposed to be. This applies to almost any place. For instance, in Japan green tea it too common to be miraculous, but pu-erh tea is supposed to lower your cholesterol, make you lose weight, and grow hair on your head. (I just made the last part up, but you get the point.) Green tea probably does have some health benefits, but drinking green tea while maintaining an otherwise unhealthy lifestyle is not going to make you healthy. And again, there’s really no telling what will happen to your body if you take massive amounts of any food, no matter how ‘natural’ it is.

I’ll get to what I think is the healthiest aspect of Japanese cuisine in a minute, but to go over some individual things:

The wide variety of vegetables and legumes (beans) consumed is a good thing. The Japanese diet includes quite a few land and sea vegetables (seaweed). Not that many cuisines are into sea vegetables, but they are very low in calories, pretty high in fiber and packed with minerals. Beans are a big part of Japanese cooking too. Seafood is mostly good too. Fish is lower in calories generally speaking than meat, and the fats it contains are of the ‘good’ kind. (The biggest things we have to be concerned about regarding fish consumption these days are the near-extinction of some species, and the amount of mercury.) Fermented products add various kinds of beneficial flora to our digestive systems, which are critical to their er, smooth functioning. Miso is the best known fermented food in Japan, but there are also a wide variety of fermented preserved foods, as well as rice malt or koji, both sweet and salty. Salt-cured rice malt or shio-koji has become very popular in Japan in recent years, and I see it slowly making its way onto the shelves of Japanese grocery stores in other countries too. I hope it becomes as commonly available as miso because it’s really versatile. People have been using sakekasu or sake lees in cooking for a long time too. I don’t count the use of sake and mirin, two alcoholic products, as part of the ‘healthy fermented foods’ mix, but the lees or mash left over after sake production are pretty low in alcohol and full of that beneficial flora. (Soy sauce is too salty to be taken in amounts big enough to take advantage of its fermented nature.) Japanese cuisine also uses quite a few things that are naturally high in fiber and low in calories. Shirataki noodles is the best known of these: it seems to be trendy all around the world, or at least in North America and Europe, as a ‘guilt-free’ alternative to pasta. There are other foods like that too, such as konnyaku which is made from the same substance as shirataki. I described some of these foods in a mini-series a while back: seaweed or sea vegetables, dried vegetables, and of course konnyaku and shirataki.

The best, healthiest parts of Japanese cuisine have little to do with individual food items. It has to do with the way food is consumed: in moderation, and with lots of variety. During a typical day, a Japanese person consumes about 15 to 20 types of food if not more; nutritionists in Japan urge everyone to eat at least 30 different types of food a day. This may seem impossibly daunting if you come from a meat-and-two-veg food culture, but it’s not a big stretch in Japanese food culture. If you eat a lot of different foods, you are much more inclined to eat a healthy balanced diet. Of course you can cheat and choose 30 types of snack foods and candies, but that would be silly. As I explained during the Japanese Cooking 101 course, a typical Japanese meal has ‘1 soup, 3 dishes” besides the main carbohydrate. Even if you don’t cook Japanese style a lot, trying to add more variety to your meals may make your everyday meals just a bit healthier.

And the other part of Japanese cuisine, or Japanese food culture, that makes it relatively healthy is small portions and moderation. If you go to Japan you will see that the streets of its cities, especially Tokyo, are just filled with restaurants and various food related establishments. People enjoy a huge variety of cuisines and foods, some of them not at all inherently ‘healthy’. French pastries for example are tremendously popular, despite reports to the contrary. All kinds of junk food abound in stores. Yet, most Japanese people manage to stay pretty slim. It’s all about portion size and moderation. You can eat your cake and your ramen and your tonkatsu, as long as you don’t eat it all the time or in huge portions and you balance it out with other foods. It’s not a sexy quick-fix kind of characteristic that grabs headlines. But I’m convinced it’s the most important one.

This is not nearly as concise as Michael Pollan’s rule of “eat food, not too much, mostly plants”, and I sort of disagree with him on some things…but anyway here’s a list I came up with yesterday when answering this question on Quora.

eat a lot of vegetablesa decent amount of fruita moderate amount of protein and carbohydratesmonounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats over saturated or trans fatsdon’t forget fiberas well as getting some beneficial flora into your system via fermented foodswatch out for sugar and refined carbohydrate overload (critical if you’re a diabetic; still important if you don’t)some people need to watch their salt intakevariety is goodAnd above all, MODERATION.

I admit I don’t follow these rules all the time myself! But, I aspire to. ^_^;


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Friday, January 20, 2012

What's in your kitchen? What is your kitchen?

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The subject of ‘kitchens’ has been front and foremost my mind, again. The renovations on the house that I talked about a few months ago haven’t really progressed much beyond what you see there. We temporarily ran out of funds, then I got sick and lost interest for a while, and on and on. But now…I want a kitchen! I have been pinning kitchen ideas almost daily on Pinterest while I wait for the necessary funds to come in. Imagine being a professional food writer, ostensibly, and not even having a kitchen. It’s not easy, folks. I would normally flee to Japan to take advantage of my mom’s kitchen there, but my current physical condition doesn’t allow me to do that. Bummer. In the meantime we are still making do with two portable burners, a tiny refrigerator…and we have to do the dishes in the bathroom sink. My patience is wearing a bit thin to say the least.

Anyway, this post is actually inspired by something else - a review left for the Just Bento Cookbook on Amazon.com. It’s not a bad review really - 4 stars is not bad after all - but the reviewer complained that the book is “not really good for American kitchens’. This got me thinking about about, what exactly is an American kitchen these days? Doesn’t a kitchen, and the ingredients it stocks, evolve over time? For instance, something like sriracha sauce was unheard of in most American kitchens just a few years ago, and now I suspect quite a few have it in their pantries along with the ketchup and the A-1 Steak Sauce. Maybe instead of those traditional, “All-American” sauces.

And so, here is an it’s-Friday-let’s-have-fun type of little questionnaire for you!

Question 1: The Amazon reviewer seems to see her kitchen as an “American kitchen”. If you had to describe yours in one short phrase, what would it be?

Question 2: What are your all-time, standby favorite pantry staples? (Up to 3)

Question 3: What new ingredient (s) have you discovered recently (say within the last couple of years) that is now part of your regular rotation?

Here are my answers!

Q1: - Japanese-French-American-offbeat (evidence of the offbeat part: Marmite…need I say more?)

Q2: - Soy sauce, Tabasco, and katsuobushi (bonito flakes)

Q3: - Almond butter. I use this now over peanut butter, because I can get unsweetened, additive-free almond butter at our local ‘bio’ (health food) store but it’s almost impossible to get decent peanut butter in France. Also, thick buttery crème fraîche from Brittany - so unlike the much thinner stuff I was used to before.

How about you? ^_^


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Saturday, August 13, 2011

What's your national dish - or, is there any such thing?

Scenes from the Shin Yokohama Ramen Museum (??????????)

In doing research for an article I’ve been writing, I was a bit surprised to find out that the two most popular dishes in Japan - often referred to as the “2 big national dishes” (?????) - are not the foods that Japan is most known for elsewhere, like sushi or miso soup. They’re actually two fairly recent imports, albeit heavily adapted and changed from whatever original dishes inspired them: ramen and curry. But I guess their popularity makes sense, since both are filling and fairly inexpensive comfort foods.

I did find it interesting that curry, introduced sometimes in the 1870s or so, and ramen, which was most likely brought to Japan by Chinese immigrants in the early part of the 20th century, have become so familiar and ingrained in Japanese culture that almost no one questions their positions at the top. (When it comes to no. 3 on the list, there’s quite a lot of debate, though the majority opinion seems to go to sushi.)

The relative newness of ramen and curry may actually help them have nationwide appeal. A lot of older foods came into existence in various regions in the days before mass communication and advertising and transportation and so on, and in some cases their appeal remains regional. For instance, while natto is available anywhere these days, people in the eastern part of Japan tend to like it a lot more than people in the west, who didn’t grow up with it. Even the kind of rice people prefer varies by region. People in the Tohoku area tend to prefer rice that’s less sticky, while people in southern Kyushu favor sticky, slightly sweet rice.

I then started looking into what the “national dishes” of other countries were. And again, you run into the same problem I think. For example the Wikipedia article on national dishes lists pot au feu and crepes as the national dishes of France. I know plenty of French people who would beg to differ with that. Crepe (or the savory version made with buckwheat, galette) is a staple of the diet in the Bretagne (Brittany), but you barely see it at all in say, Provence…unless you go to a special crepe restaurant. Or how about the Wikipedia listing for Switzerland, fondue? Sure, fondue is popular - in certain regions of Switzerland. And fondue is what tourists expect when they visit the country, so that’s what they often do get in restaurants. But in the Zürich area where The Guy was born and raised, traditional dishes are things like sausages with bread or rösti (shredded potato pancake) or Zürigschnätzlets, a creamy stew with veal. Or how about the U.S.? Again, Wikipedia lists hamburgers and apple pie - but really? What about pizza (but what kind? Deep dish Chicago style? New York style?) or barbeque (what kind again?) or… You get the idea.

Anyway - what, in your opinion, should be regarded as the National Dishes of your country? Is it even possible to select just two or three such things? If so, what would you select, and why? To make this tough, let’s limit it to just three items. ^_^


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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Filipino Food – The New <b>Asian Food</b> What's New in Trendy <b>Asian Food</b> <b>...</b>

As Americans, we get to experience a wide range of cuisine. From Ethiopian to Israeli, French to Comfort food, we’ve got it all. And we love Asian Cuisine. Chinese food is what we order when we’re tired or have no Thanksgiving plans and Pad Thai is available at our neighborhood bodegas. We’ve sampled more Asian cuisine than Confucius! Now there’s an Asian Cuisine growing in popularity Americans are not as familiar with.

Filipino food is some is one of the most diverse cuisines on the planet. This is because the Philippines, though small, is one of the most diverse countries on the Earth. And since the 90's more and more Filipinos have moved into the United States (the Philippines is one of the top four “sending countries” since 1998) introducing their eclectic cuisine to the States.

The Philippines is a country with over 80 ethnicities, 170 languages and the richest biodiversity in the world. The country’s culture is a blend of Chinese, Indonesian, Spanish, Mexican, American and its own Malayo-Polynesian origins.

The most popular Filipino dish amongst Americans is lumpia. Lumpia is influenced by the Chinese spring or egg roll. It is stuffed with an assortment of vegetables including turnips, carrots, sprouts and minced onions combined with meats like shrimp, beef or pork. The Filipino lumpia contains fewer ingredients than a Chinese Spring or Egg roll, leaving a fresh taste in your mouth with hints of the Philippine’s tropical flavors.

Tropical flavors like those in the refreshing drinks like the Cantaloupe or Gulaman and Sago drink. The Cantaloupe drink is made up of freshly shaved Cantaloupe with water, ice and sugar. The Gulaman and Sago drink is mixed with agar gelatin and tapioca balls/pearls. These sweet, cool drinks are a perfect compliment to your main course.

Or, try the popular and delicious Sinigang soup. This tasty soup is loaded with ingredients! Sinigang soup incorporates fish, pork, chicken, shrimp, or beef. While all these options are delicious, this soup’s tamarind base couples best with shrimp. Just look for Sinigang na Hipon (Hipon means shrimp) for this dish and reach for your largest spoon.

Having grown up in California’s Bay Area, Filipino cuisine is nothing new for me. However, I was thrilled to learn how limited my experience of Filipino food really was. Having eaten my share of lumpia and pancit sotanghon, my mouth was watering while learning the vast selection of Filipino food. Not to mention the exciting collection of Spanish, Mexican, Chinese and Indonesian influences on Filipino food. Lesson learned, eat more Filipino food.

Try the paellas, the curry-based kare-kare, and the sweet dessert halo-halo. The halo-halo is more than worth exploring and is a delicious example of how eclectic Filipino food really is. This dessert is sweet and savory mixed with nangka (jackfruit), kidney beans, plantains, garbanzos, custard, corn kernels, milk and ice cream. Halo-halo is often covered with shaved ice, nuts and fruit; this dessert is delicious and romantic.

The more celebratory dishes are lechón (roasted pig), sapin-sapin, pinakbet, puto and tapsilog. All dishes feature the sour, tangy and vinegar taste so particular to Filipino food, which is as “fusion” as you can get. The best part about Filipino Cuisine is you can explore new flavors in dishes you already love.

There are some great places online like PhilamFood.com that carry a huge selection of Filipino and Asian groceries, recipes and supplies, if you looking to give it a try.

I like to write about the internet, food, entertainment, music| and varied subjects. I will be writing up more recipes and information about Filipino & Asian Groceries.

I love to write and joke about food, entertainment, music and shopping..
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Sunday, December 19, 2010

Ma What's For Dinner? Cookbook

The Ma What's For Dinner Cookbook is the official Cookbook from Alex Fitzpatrick, creator of extremely popular website http://www.mawhats4dinner.com, a guide to cooking food your kids actually want to eat! Promote to Mom or Cooking niches for big sales!


Check it out!