
The grocery store is probably the biggest challenge I’ve
faced yet since being in Japan.
First of
all, there is the obvious language barrier.
Everything is written in Japanese, usually in kanji (meaning that even
if I know how to pronounce a food in Japanese, I won’t be able to read
it).
And even when there is some kana
that I can try to interpret, Japanese advertising specialists love to use
stylized fonts which are all but beyond my abilities to decipher.
And the best thing of all: packaging.
If all else fails, most packages have
pictures on the outside showing the contents.
This only helps sometimes though.
For example, some instant miso soup (pictured right). Looks just like the package.
On the other hand, I thought this package might contain some dried tofu:
 |
| Bouillion cubes, not tofu |
 |
| Inside the dashi box. |
 |
| Outside the box of dashi. |
But the language barrier isn’t the only hard thing about
groceries.
No more American
ingredients.
At least, they aren’t
nearly as common or prevalent here as they are back home.
Not only am I shopping in a foreign language,
I am shopping for foods that I don’t know how to cook.
Even if I could read the labels, I wouldn’t
know what to do with most of it.
Sure,
there’s simple stuff like eggs and vegies and stuff that cook the same all over
the world, but that gets boring pretty quick.
And there are a lot of fun flavors here that I want to experiment
with.
Lucky for me there’s this thing
called the internet and it has things called cooking blogs.
I found
this one last week and made some
Kitsune Udon. MMM.
But that meant an
extra trip to the grocery store to find some mystery ingredients: negi (long
onion), dashi (soup stock), narutomaki (just google it), and inariage (sweet
fried tofu pouch).
The dashi proved the
most difficult.
The blog describes dashi
as coming in small teabag-like pouches.
You steep the dashi in boiling water for a few minutes, remove the
pouch, and you have some stock ready for soup.
Well, at the grocery store I eventually had an employee show me where to
find dashi.
I found what looked like the
best deal there, and bought a kilo of the stuff.
Once I got back to the house I opened it up
and found not a box full of teabag-like pouches, but a bag of powder.
Hmm.
After some more research, I found out that I had bought instant dashi;
just mix it in with some boiling water and pow, soup stock.
Apparently it isn’t as great as the other
type, but it does basically the same thing.
The udon turned out pretty good, I think, and it was really easy to
make.

I’m sure I will have many more food adventures over
here. And I’m starting to get familiar
with the grocery store down the street too.
Any good (easy) Japanese recipes will be much appreciated.
sweet! nice job Bryan. I am impressed by your Intercultural cooking abilities.
ReplyDeleteHey Bryan, I too am impressed by this adventure in culinary grandeur. It sounds like you're having a pretty cool experience-- keep the stories coming :)
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