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Food |
Sashimi
or sliced raw fish/seafood (such as tuna or octopus) is best served with
condiments such as shredded daikon radish or gingerroot, wasabi, and soy
sauce. As it is served raw, only the freshest and highest quality fish
should be used for sashimi.
Kaiseki Ryori is considered
the most exquisite culinary in Japan. The ingredients, preparation, setting
and presentation come together to create a dining experience quite unlike
any other. It started as an adjunct to the tea ceremony, mainly a vegetarian
affair, and evolved to its most complex form at first-class Japanese restaurants
today. Sake is drunk during the meal. Rice, on the other hand, is served
at the end, as it is not customary to eat rice while drinking sake. Appetizers
(sakizuke or otoshi), sashimi (sliced raw fish or tsukuri), suimono (clear
soup), yakimono (grilled foods), mushimono (steamed foods), nimono (simmered
foods), and aemono (dressed salad-like foods) are served first, followed
by miso soup, tsukemono (pickles), rice, Japanese sweets, and fruits.
Tea concludes the meal.
It
is the aroma of grilled chicken that will lead one to a yakitori restaurant,
most of which are located near train stations with a red lantern outside.
Yakitori is a popular after-work meal, not so much of a feast but more
of an accompaniment to sake or beer. The dish comprises of small pieces
of chicken meat dipped in barbecue sauce, as well as liver and vegetables
skewered on bamboo sticks and grilled to perfection over hot charcoals.
Diners will be enticed to return for more, given the variety of yakitori
to choose from.
Tonkatsu
is a deep-fried breaded pork cutlet served with a special sauce. Often
part of a set meal (tonkatsu teishoku), this is one dish that should not
be missed. Diners also have the choice of asking for a fatter cut (rosu)
or leaner cut (hire). Tonkatsu is served both at specialty restaurants
and shokudo.
There
are two types of Japanese noodles; soba, which are thin, brown, buckwheat
noodles, and udon, thick, white, wheat noodles. These noodles are served
either hot or cold. If served hot, the noodles are presented in a bowl
containing a light broth. The 'cold version' comes on a bamboo screen
with a cold broth for dipping the noodles. The most popular type of cold
noodles is zaru soba, which is served with bits of seaweed (nori) sprinkled
on top. A small plate of wasabi and sliced scallions accompany each noodle
dish. These are dipped into a cup of broth followed by the noodles. At
the end of the meal, hot broth is mixed with the leftover sauce, which
is then drunk like a kind of tea. Last but not least, do slurp the broth
as loudly as you please to signify the excellence of the meal!
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