Japanese
cuisine is to Asia what French cuisine is to Europe: the ultimate
in elegance of food preparation. Traditionally French and Japanese
cuisine otherwise do not have much in common. However, the French
nouvelle cuisine had, knowingly or unknowingly, adopted
quite a bit of the Japanese philosophy of food preparation, as
for example the great importance put on the freshness of
in-gredients and exercising restraint in cooking, or over cooking.
Unique to
Japanese cuisine is the large number of raw foods, chiefly raw
fish (sashimi). Tuna (akami) is the main fish used
for sashimi. The raw fish is eaten with soy sauce and a green
horse-radish mustard (wasabe).
Whereas the
most peculiar way of serving fish is raw, the most peculiar preparation
of shrimp and squid is to dip it in flour and then deep fry it.
This way of preparation is called tempura. Vegetables are
also commonly cooked tempura style.
Meat
plays less of a role in traditional Japanese cuisine than in any
other cuisine of the world. Actually in classical Japan it was
barely considered fit for human consumption and rarely eaten.
But as Japan has hesitatingly let in outside influence, meat is
more common now than in the past.
The most
famous Japanese meat is Kobe beef. Kobe is a city near
Tokyo, but the term "Kobe beef" describes a manner of raising
rather than the origin of the cattle. To raise beef in Kobe tradition
means to pamper it, to administer massages to the living beef,
and to feed it on an special diet including beer to keep the animal
constantly relaxed and lazy. It thus is no surprise that Kobe
beef is really expensive. A Kobe steak can easily cost a thousand
pesos in not even a very exclusive restaurant. But not many restaurants
have it on their menu.
Steak anyway
is not the most common Japanese cut of beef. More often it is
thinly sliced in bite size and then lightly boiled and served
with glass noodles, bean curd (tofu), and a lot of vegetables.
The Japanese name of this dish is sukiyaki. Cooking sukiyaki
requires so little effort that it is often done at the table and
while eating. Pork and chicken on the contrary are often fried
and spiced with ginger and sesame. Another common
meat seasoning is teriyaki, a sweetened soy sauce.
In Japanese
dining order soups are not eaten before the main course but at
the same time. Japanese cuisine has a number of fish soups; the
most peculiar, however, is miso soup, made of dissolved
soy bean paste. It is a side dish to many meals.
In modern
times, noodle soups have been popularized in Japan mainly because
they are so readily available in instant packages. In the
Philippines, too, groceries and supermarkets meanwhile sell many
brands of instant noodle soup. Nissin Ramen is a brand
originally from Japan (ramen being the Japanese word for
noodles).
As throughout
East Asia, the staple food in Japan is rice (golan). However,
there are some typical Japanese methods of preparation.
Every Westerner
thinks of rolls baked from wheat flour. But the Japanese
make rolls from rice; not from rice flour but from cooked glutinous
rice. This rice is wrapped in leaves and served cold, and just
like a sandwich it has cold cuts and a spread with it. However,
the cold cuts are not sausage or meat but seafood or fish, and
the spread is not mayon-naise but Japanese horse-radish mustard,
wasabe. This kind of rice sandwiches are called sushi,
and they are mostly eaten as a kind of hors d'oeuvre.
There are
a number of preparations resembling those of neigh-boring countries.
The Japanese also pickle vegetables like the Koreans but pickled
vegetables (oshinko) are not as important to the Japanese
table as are the kim-chi to the Koreans.
The most
typical Japanese dessert is chawan mushi, an egg custard
cream.
Japanese
cuisine is cheap nowhere in the world. For fish to be eaten raw
it must be very fresh. Transportation and storage therefore is
much more an effort which increases the cost. By no means is eating
Japanese in Japan cheap; Manila is probably the cheapest place
for eating Japanese foods throughout the world.
Unlike Japanese
style entertainment spots, Japanese restaurants in Manila do not
mainly cater to a Japanese clientele. Many Filipinos are fond
of eating Japanese style, and a majority of the Japanese restaurants
in Manila are not run by Japanese expatriates but by Filipinos.
A good deal
for eating Japanese are the lunch and dinner buffets of five star
hotels. Commonly the buffets of five star hotels are dedicated
to the cuisine of a dif-ferent nation every month, and usually
once a year they are Japanese. Raw fish is not a very filling
dish; therefore the por-tions that can be eaten of sashimi are
much larger than those of a stew or of steaks.
Where
to eat:
Japanese Restaurants
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