Showing posts with label Z eggs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Z eggs. Show all posts

5/11/2008

KYOTO and Kaiseki

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Kyoto, the Old Capital of Japan

CLICK for more photosKyoto (京都 Kyōto, Kyooto, Kioto) is a city in the central part of the island of Honshū, Japan. It has a population close to 1.5 million. Formerly the imperial capital of Japan, it is now the capital of Kyoto Prefecture, as well as a major part of the Osaka-Kobe-Kyoto metropolitan area.

Heian-kyō (平安京 "tranquility and peace capital"), became the seat of Japan's imperial court in 794, beginning the Heian period of Japanese history. In Japanese, the city has been called Kyo (京), Miyako (Miako) (都) or Kyo no Miyako (京の都). Keishi (京師), meaning "metropolis".
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



Nishiki Food Market 京都錦市場



quote
..... And though it’s certainly not Japan’s largest or flashiest food market, the things you’ll find here—from just-harvested, flame-orange locally grown carrots, to eels arranged, pretty as necklaces, on their beds of ice, to woven baskets abrim with fresh chestnuts—really do represent the best, the freshest, of Kyoto’s culinary offerings.

Most of the 126 stalls sell just one thing: grilled squid, or omelets, or sugared fruit, or rice balls. It’s the perfect place to come to find a cheap meal or a snack, or just to witness the quality and care with which the Japanese treat even the most ordinary, the most humble, objects of life. After all, that attention to detail and presentation is, as much as the food itself, what makes Japan the place it is.
source : Hanaya Yanagihara


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Kaiseki Meal, Kaiseki Ryori 懐石料理
kaiseki ryoori

This meal, written like "a hot stone carried in your robe to keep the belly warm", started off as a small meal before the tea ceremony, consisting of one soup dish and three vegetable dishes. The meaning was to keep the stomach and breast warm, to carry over the hunger until the real meal was served.
The meal was served warm, a way to "show" that the kitchen was close by, the host was a poor and humble man.

It then evolved into one of the most elaborate food preparation of Japan, written with the meaning "to meet and sit down" 会席料理, as did the feudal lords with their entourage. These meals were served cold, since the host was rich and had a large estate, with the kitchen in a different section of the manor.
Its arrangements on special seasonal dishes are a feast for the eye. The daimyo had access to all kinds of food, from fresh fish to animals of the forest and could serve expensive tidbids.

CLICK for more photos CLICK for more ENGLISH information

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Order of the dishes served

Originally, kaiseki comprised a bowl of miso soup and three side dishes. It has since evolved to include an appetizer, sashimi, a simmered dish, a grilled dish, and a steamed course, in addition to other dishes at the discretion of the chef.

Sakizuke: an appetizer similar to the French amuse-gueule.
Hassun: the second course, which sets the seasonal theme. Typically one kind of sushi and several smaller side dishes.
Mukozuke: a sliced dish of seasonal sashimi.
Takiawase: vegetables served with meat, fish or tofu; the ingredients are simmered separately.
Futamono: a "lidded dish"; typically a soup.

Yakimono: Broiled seasonal fish.
Su-zakana: a small dish used to clean the palate, such as vegetables in vinegar.
Hiyashi-bachi: served only in summer; chilled, lightly-cooked vegetables.
Naka-choko: another palate-cleanser; may be a light, acidic soup.
Shiizakana: a substantial dish, such as a hot pot.

Gohan: a rice dish made with seasonal ingredients.
Ko no mono: seasonal pickled vegetables.
Tome-wan: a miso-based or vegetable soup served with rice.
Mizumono: a seasonal dessert; may be fruit, confection, ice cream, or cake.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



ainame to tamagodofu no haru-wan ...Frühlingsschale mit Eierstich und Fisch
haru no sakizuke ...Kleines Frühlingsgericht

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Hassun 八寸
contains three different tastes:
from the mountains, yama no mono 山のもの
from the field, no no mono 野のもの
from the sea, umi no mono 海のもの
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



kaiseki 会席料理
This is a more informal banquet-type meal served in Kyoto restaurants together with ricewine, whilst the
kaiseki 懐石料理 is served with tea.


kappoo ryoori 割烹料理 kappo food
Kappoo, Kappo, a simpler style of Kaiseki Food



obansai / obanzai おばんさい / お晩彩 /御晩菜
home-cooking of vegetables and small dishes from Kyoto
originall writen お番采 ("vegetables on duty", normal vegetable)
Kyoo no obansai 京のおばんさい / 京のおばんざい obanzai
lit. like this お晩彩 "colors for the evening"
CLICK for more photos traditional home-style cuisine
It has all the flavor of vegetarian temple cuisine, imperial court cuisine, tea ceremony kaiseki cuisine and more of the refinement of Kyoto cooking.
Most dishes are made from vegetables.


CLICK for more photos of OMAWARI It was also called "Omawari おまわり" already since the court cooking of the Heian period, when one dish of rice was surrounded by up to six small plates with side dishes.
Another word is "Ozayoo" お雑用 "variuos things" or
mainichi no okazu 毎日のおかず food of every day

Many old homes keep a yearly diary, called "saichuu oboe" 歳中覚, where the various dishes for special days are recorded since more than 200 years and passed on to the housewife by her mother in law.
Not a bit of any vegetable is wasted and left-over food has to be rearranged to a delicious obanzai on the next day.
Now ther is even Kaiseki Obanzai おばんざい懐石 and Obanzai Baikingu おばんざいバイキング (self-service) restaurants.

. . . CLICK here for Photos !

Reference : Kyoto Obansai
Reference : Kyoto Obanzai




Nanzenji no toofu ryoori 南禅寺の豆腐料理
Vegetarian and tofu dishes from temple Nanzenji


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For Kyoto, the fresh drinking water was essential and supported the many tea houses and tea masters and also the shops making sweets and kaiseki and other food.
KIYOMIZU 清水 and fresh drinking water
Trinkwasser


みたらしだんご mitarashi dango, dumplings with sauce
from Shimogamo Shrine, with special well water


Well near the Sweet Shop Kameya Yoshinaga
Samega-i 醒ケ井 "Wake-up well"
Reference : "Samegai Well"

. . . CLICK here for Photos !



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Other dishes from Kyoto


Kyooyasai, kyoyasai, kyosai 京野菜 / 京菜 Vegetables from Kyoto.
Gemüse aus Kyoto, Kyoto-Gemüse, Kyoo-yasai
Kujoonegi, Kujoo negi, Kujonegi 九条葱(くじょうねぎ)
leek from Kujo in Kyoto


Kamonasu no dengaku 賀茂なすの田楽
round eggplants with miso paste, served on the "riverbed restaurants" 川床 kawadoko, dining decks on the river Kamogawa. A custom since the 16th century in summer.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

Reference : Kawadoko Dining in Kyoto

. . . . . also
kawadoko ryoori 川床料理
near shrine Kibune Jinja 貴船神社 served in the forest restaurants along the clean river.
. . . CLICK here for Photos ! 貴船の川床料理

. kawayuka 川床(かわゆか)riverbed veranda  and more related KIGO



Kyoo tsukemono 京漬物 pickles from Kyoto
see below, senmaizuke, shibazuke.


furofuki daikon ふろふきだいこん boiled radish with kombu and a bit of yuzu
with radish from Temple Shogo-In 聖護院


mizuna to oage no taitan みず菜とおあげの炊いたん boiled vegetables and mizuna leaves


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Lake Biwa, (Biwako 琵琶湖)
and its Fish Cuisine 琵琶湖料理


burakku basu ryoori ブラックバス 料理 dishes with black bass
large-mouth bass Micropterus salmoides
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
There are a lot in Lake Biwa (Biwako 琵琶湖) , from collectors who did not want to keep them any more, and they do a lot of damage to the lake ecology. Many say they are not tasty. But as tempura, they are now a cheap hit.
basu tenpura バス天ぷら Udon with black bass tempura
ブラックバス天ぷら
burakku basu don ブラックバス丼 tempura on rice
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

Recently the biodiversity of the lake has suffered greatly due to the invasion of foreign fish, the black bass and the bluegill. Bluegill were presented to the Emperor and later freed in the lake as a food source for other fish. Black bass were introduced as a sport fish.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !
Schwarzer Barsch, Grossmaul-Barsch


isaza 魦 いさざ Lake Biwa goby, Chaenogobius isaza
Grundelart, der Isaza
isaza nabe いさざ鍋 hodgepodge
isaza to harusame no su no mono いさざと春雨の酢のもの with harusame noodles and vinegar
isaza to ebi no gomoku age いさざとえびの五目揚げ fried with small shrimp
isaza no nimono いさざの煮物 simmered goby


ko-ayu no tenpura こあゆの天ぷら tempura from small sweetfish
ko-ayu no amazu-ni こあゆの甘酢煮 small sweetfish simmered in sweet vinegar

ko-ebi no age-ni 小えびの揚げ煮 fried and simmered small shrimp

sujiebi, suji-ebi 藻えび / mo-ebi もえび (藻蝦)
middle-shrimp, Metapenaeus intermedius
suji-ebi no kaki-age すじえぴのかき揚げ fried suji shrimp
suji-ebi iri poteto kurokke すじえび入りポテトコロッケ potato croquettes with suji shrimp
. . . CLICK here for suji ebi Photos !




kani, kaki, buri ryoori
カニ、カキ、ブリ料理
Fish and Seafood dishes in Winter
They come mostly from the Sea of Japan, like Echizen crabs and oysters and yellowtail.



Lake Biwa, Japan's largest lake, is located at the center of this prefecture:
WASHOKU
Shiga Prefecture - Regional Dishes



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amadai あまだい sweet tai tilefish
Lopholatilus chamealeonticeps


azukimeshi, azuki-meshi 小豆飯 rice with red adzuki beans
Cooked on auspicious occasions for the birth of a child, first day of school and so on. The type Dainagon Azuki from Tanba is used. Rice is partly normal rice, partly mochigome soft rice, and a bit of salt is used for the flavor.
dainagon azuki 大納言あずき



barazushi, bara sushi ばらずし Barazushi
a kind of chirashizushi
It is made mostly with kanbutsu dried ingredients, some local vegetables and boiled shrimp for some red color. Slices of fried egg for yellow.
Prepared for festivals,especially the Doll Festival on March 3.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


bubuzuke ぶぶづけ/ ぶぶ漬け ochazuke from Kyoto お茶漬け




chirimen sanshoo ちりめん山椒 boiled small fish with Japanese pepper
chirimenjako ちりめんじゃこ【縮緬雑魚】 are small salted boiled fish babies.
Together you have the bounty of the sea and of the mountains (umi no sachi / yama no sachi). It tasts nice on white rice.



detchi yookan でっち羊羹 / 丁稚(でっち)ようかん sweet bean jelly
also eaten in Shiga.



Ekijuutoo Ekijuto 益寿糖 "Sugar for a longer life"


Gion doofu 祇園豆腐 Gion Tofu the Niken Chaya Shop 二軒茶屋


fujizushi, fuji sushi 藤寿司 (ふじすし)"wisteria sushi"
sushi with black beans. Black beans from Tanba 丹波黒大豆 are used for this festive sushi. The rice is cooked with the boiling broth of the black beans and thus becomes gray. Later vinegar is added and it changes to a bright red-violett (like the flower fuji wisteria.



funazushi ふなずし fermented funa fish sushi
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
a kind of narezushi, fermented fish and rice
kigo for summer



Fushimi toogarashini, togarashi-ni
伏見とうがらし煮
boiled chillies from Fushimi
Fushimi toogarashi 伏見とうがらし, see Kyoto Vegetables.
Made in summer to get an appetite.


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hamo 鱧 (はも) pike conger pike, pike eel and the Gion Festival
. . . Hamo no kawa 鱧の皮 (はものかわ)skin of the conger pike; pike eel
kigo for summer
Muraenesox cinereus. dragontooth



heshiko へしこ pickled saba mackerel for one year
Saba or iwashi from the Tango Seaside is marinated.
also eaten in Fukui.


hiuo 氷魚 (ひうお) small ayu trout
The "Diamonds of lake Biwa". 琵琶湖のダイヤモンド
They are rather small and have a shiny skin. Served grilled, even the head is grilled while stuck into a net and then all is eaten.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



honmoroko, hon moroko 本諸子, ホンモロコ, 諸子 (もろこ)
Gnathopogon elongatus
small kind of carp.
It is eaten in Kyoto as a very expensive fish. Now farmers in Tottori are growing it in old rice paddies and sell it to Kyoto.
kigo for all spring
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


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imoboo 芋棒(いもぼう) "potatoes like a stick", long taro
cooked with cod fish.
made from famous taro potatoes "like shrimp" ebi-imo 海老芋 (えびいも), also known as Kyoo imo 京芋(きょういも) potato from Kyoto, imobo, which grow near the temple Toji 東寺. They have been introduced to Kyoto by a prince of the imperial family, Hirano Gondayu 平野権太夫, from Kyushu, first called "taro from China" (too no imo 唐芋(とうのいも), around 1725. Now they are cooked or mixed with potatoes from Hokkaido.
Reference : Imobo Hirano-ya Honten, Kyoto



itokojiru いとこ汁 vegetable miso soup "Nephew soup"
"the soup", shirumono 汁もの
From Nagaoka, with local eggplants, pumpkins and red beans, in miso and soy sauce.
It is especially prepared in the village of Joododani 浄土谷 on the night of Obon (august 13) to welcome the ancestors' souls (o-shoorai san おしょらいさん(精霊)).
The dish is simple but healthy and has been given as schoo lunch too.
The name comes from putting the vegetables in the broth, like 追い追い OI OI, which could alse be spelled 甥、甥, meaning "nephew".
see also
Itokoni いとこ煮、従弟煮 "Boiled Nephews"
from Yamaguchi prefecture


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. Karakki からっキー a mascot for red hot pepper  
京都向日市激激辛商店街



kayaku gohan かやく御飯, kayaku meshi かやく飯
a kind of gomoku gohan, eaten in Kansai.
with vegetables, fish and meat.

Kayaku ... 加薬 (かやく) addition or adjuvant
Add medicine to your food.



Kenchinjiru けんちんじる(巻繊汁) vegetable soup
also from temple Kenchoji, Kamakura. けんちん汁
In some areas they put in new vegetables with the left-over broth and heat it up again. This soup is then called KENCHAN けんちゃん.


kinome-ni,kinomeni 木の芽煮 simmered tree buds of sanshoo pepper
Kurama
The leaves and fruit of the Japanese pepper tree are simmered in sweet soy sauce like tsukudani. This mixture is very pungent and can be eaten on top of white rice.
CLICK here for PHOTOS !


kuromameni, kuromame-ni 黒豆煮 boilded black beans with rice
from Tamba beans
Auspicious food for the New Year im memory of winning a battle (kachi ikusa 勝ち戦). Some add boiled chestnuts. Sometimes a rusty nail is added when boiling.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



Kyoo kurorooru kuromaru 京黒ロール /くろまる
roll cake with black bamboo coal from Arashiyama and namkuriimu cream inside.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



Minazuki 水無月Kyoto sweets for June
with a layer of red azuki beans



nattoomochi, nattoo mochi 納豆餅(なっとうもち)
From Tango. They are eaten on the three days of the New Year instead of the usual zooni soup. They are about 15 cm in diameter and round. Natto fermented soy beans is smeared around the white mochi.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !




nikuman 肉饅頭(にくまんじゅう) steamed bun with meat, and the initials of "old capital"
From Ebisu Rakuan restaurant in Kyoto



nishinnasu, nishin nasu にしんなす herring and eggplants
since Kyoto was far away from the coast, dried fish was used for this dish. A typical summer dish.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



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sabazushi 鯖寿司 makerel sushi
saba no boozushi さばの棒寿司 long makerel sushi
Saba-Bozushi
pressed sushi made with cured, marinated makerel
Reference

. . . . . guji ぐじ tilefish
Wakasa guji,specialty of the Wakasa peninsula and one of the finest ingredients in Japanese cooking. Salted Wakasa Guji used to be sent to Kyoto via the Mackerel-Road (saba kaido 鯖街道) along with salted mackerels and Wakasa flatfish, as they are important ingredients for Kyoto cuisine.

WASHOKU : makerel road (saba kaidoo 鯖街道、さばかいどう)

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. Saga doofu 嵯峨豆腐 Tofu from Saga, Arashiyama
Tofu shop Morika 森嘉(もりか) 



Saikyoo miso 西京味噌 Saikyo miso from western Kyoto
a kind of white miso paste
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
..... also akadashi miso



sasamaki, sasa-maki, chimaki 笹巻き / ちまき
sweets wrapped in a bamboo grass leaf
auspicious food eaten on the Boy's Day in May, the middle day of the year, 11 days after the summer equinox (半夏生(hangeshooはんげしょう). uruchi rice and mochigome rice are blended 7:3 . They are formed to long sticks, four are bound together and steamed.
Reference
sasa, Sasa japonica.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
During the Gion Festival in July the wrapping only is sold as a talisman. You can tie it to your front door for protection from evil influence and disease for your family.



senmaizuke せんまい漬け / 千枚漬 pickled trunips
"1000 slices"
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


Seta shijimi
corbicula from Seta (瀬田蜆) and the Seta Bridge


Shibazuke しば漬け / 柴漬け 
Perilla pickles with eggplant
 
From Ohara 大原


Shookadoo Bentoo 松花堂弁当 Shokado Bento Lunchbox


Sukiyaki from Mishima Tei すき焼きno 三嶋亭


suppon nabe すっぽんなべ suppon turtle stew
kigo for all winter
Has a tradition of more than 300 years in Kyoto.
Washoku : Nabe Hodgepodge Food


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Taizagani 間人蟹 (たいざがに)zuwaigani crabs from Taiza port
At the Tango sea of Japan.
This is a small port with only five ships, whidh make the tour every day and bring the fresh crabs to the harbor for sale. They are said to be the best you can get in Kyoto.
The egg of the female are of two types,
sotoko 外子 outer eggs
uchiko 内子 inner eggs
These female crabs are also called KOPPEGANI こっぺがに and the eggs are mixed with rice for a simple but delicious
koppedon こっぺ丼 bowl of rice with one female Matsuba crab
. . . CLICK here for Photos !




Tanba matsutake 丹波松茸
pine mushrooms from the Tamba region


Tango no barazushi 丹後のばらずし sushi rice with scattered ingredients
(a kind of gomokukzushi)
for the autumn festival in Tango. Farmers give it away to people who helped them with the harvest. They have a special wooden container to make it (matsubuta sushi まつぶた寿司). It is a very colorful sushi, with sansho Japanese pepper leaves for green, egg for yellow and red pickled ginger.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
... other types of barazushi ばら寿司 eaten of festive days.



tochimochi, tochi-mochi 栃もち / とち餅 / とちもち dumplings from horse chestnuts
The chestnuts have to be watered and the bitterness taken off by rinsing them in fresh mountain creeks. They are then mixed with mochigome rice. When fried and some sugar and soy sauce is added, they taste quite nice. It was a food for poor farmers in mountainous regions to make it over the winter months.
Also eaten in Tottori and many other mountainous parts of Japan.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



WASHOKU : Ujicha, Uji-cha 宇治茶 tea from Uji
The most famous Uji tea in Kyoto, already used by Sen no Rikyu.


unagi chazuke 鰻茶漬け eel on rice with green Uji tea.
From Ujidahara Village 宇治田原町


uzumidoofu, uzumi tofu, uzumi dofu うずみ豆腐 "tofu burried in rice"
uzumaru 埋まる lit. means to be burried under something.
It can be freshly cooked white rice or rice gruel (kayu) or mochigome sticky rice.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



wagashi 和菓子
WASHOKU : KYOTO SWEETS  


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Yahata-maki やはたまき (八幡巻き) anago and eel roll with local burdock


Yanaka shooga 谷中生姜 Yanaka stem ginger



yatsuhashi, nama yatsuhashi 生八ッ橋
Yatsuhashi, Iris Bridge Cake, やつはし 八橋
The name is a reference to the famous Tales of Genji.



Yuba 湯葉/湯波/油皮 soymilk skin


Yudoofu, tofu in boiling water ... 湯豆腐
..... yuyakko 湯奴
kigo for all winter



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Worldwide use


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Things found on the way



Reference : Kyoto Kaiseki


Dining in Kyoto
Kyoto Yuka Outdoor Dining
Kyoto Beer Gardens, Halls and Restaurants
source : www.kyotoguide.com


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Kaiseki Food for the Seasons
WKD Library



Find out where (and what) the locals are eating from some longtime residents of Kyoto, both ex pat and Japanese here on Kyoto Foodie!
source : kyotofoodie.com / Kyoto Foodie!




04 special kaiseki

Local Kaiseki Boxes from Okayama


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HAIKU



..... WKD . Edo and Kyoto, Capitals of Japan
"Blossom Capital" flourishing town (hana no miyako 花の都)


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Haiku about the hio trouts

. Matsuo Basho 松尾芭蕉 - Archives of the WKD .

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氷魚痩せて月の雫と解けぬべし  
hio yasete tsuki no shizuku to tokenu beshi

Masaoka Shiki 正岡子規

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氷魚くへば瀬瀬の網代木見たきかな   
hio kueba sese no ajirogi mitaki kana 

Matsuse Seisei 松瀬青々 [1869~1937]
born in Osaka


ajirogui 網代杙(あじろぐい) is a kigo for winter

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鮒鮨や彦根の城に雲かかる
funazushi ya Hikone no shiro ni kumo kakaru

crucian carp sushi -
the castle of Hikone
is wrapped in clouds

Yosa Buson 蕪村


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composing haiku -
more difficult than
composing a meal

Gabi Greve


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Related words

WASHOKU : more about Kyoto dishes

Tenzoo 典座 Tenzo kyokun, the Zen cook teachings


***** WASHOKU : Regional Japanese Dishes

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5/09/2008

Ishikawa Prefecture

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Ishikawa (Kaga)


Including Wajima, Noto Peninsula, some islands, including Notojima, Mitsukejima, Hegurajima. Wajima is famous for its laquer ware.
Lackarbeiten aus Wajima.

Ishikawa Prefecture (石川県, Ishikawa-ken) is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūbu region on Honshū island. The capital is Kanazawa 金沢.

(Noh) was introduced to the area during the rule of the fifth Maeda lord Tsunanori and was refined into the Kaga hosho style.
The tea ceremony arrived in 1666 when Maeda Toshitsune invited Senbiki Soshitsu of urasenke to Kanazawa.
Kutani porcelain (Kutani yaki), bright colored glazes not unlike Chinese porcelain.
Ohi teaware (Ōhi yaki), a pottery style unique to Kanazawa.
Kaga silk (Kaga yūzen), a complicated silk print technique with an intentional rough look (wabi-sabi).
Kanazawa lacquerware (Kanazawa shikki), high quality lacquerware traditionally decorated with gold dust.
Kanazawa gold leaf (Kanazawa haku), a technique of beating gold into wafer-thin sheets.
Kaga mizuhiki, ribbon-like decorations made from glued Japanese paper (washi).
Kaga inlay crafts (Kaga zōgan), a combination of thin flat and thread metal inlays.

© More in the WIKIPEDIA !

oomichoo ichiba 近江町市場 Omi-cho Market

the old Kaga domain 加賀

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Special dishes from Ishikawa

quote
Since ancient times, the human race has benefited from microorganisms by creating various fermented foods. Japan has internationally well known fermented foods such as soy sauce and miso, sake, dried bonito and natto, but it seems that with its hot, humid summers and cold winters, Ishikawa Prefecture has a climate that is particularly suited to fermentation. And indeed, there are many fermented foods in Ishikawa as well.
see below
Narezushi
Ishiri/Ishiru
Kabura-zushi/Daikon-zushi
Konka-zuke (fish pickled in rice-bran paste)

source : shofu.pref.ishikawa.jp



akashia hachimitsu アカシアはちみつ acacia honey


amaebi 甘えび sweet shrimp
. . . . . gasuebi, gasu-ebi , Echizen amaebi, ama-ebi 越前甘えび / がすえび/ がす海老
Grilled with salt as shioyaki.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
but
Echizen (越前国, Echizen no kuni) was an old province of Japan, which is today the northern part of Fukui prefecture.


azami no uchimame jiru あざみの打ち豆汁 soup with thistles

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WASHOKU
FU 麩 Wheat glutene preparations
 
breadlike pieces of dried wheat gluten  
necessary for the Kaga cuisine. sudarebu
Fu-Croutons, aus Weizenmehl.
Enthalten Weizengluten

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fugu no ranso no nukazuke ふぐの卵巣の糠漬け roe of fugu fish ovaries with eggs pickled in ricebran
The ovaries are poisonous. They are first pickled in salt for one year, then in komenuka ricebran from the area for another year, while some iwashi-dashi is poored into the barrels to give it better taste. This dissolves the poison and makes it a delicous topping for rice. Some families keep the proud tradition as a kind of "World Heritage".
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



gori no tsukudani ごりの佃煮 tsukudani of gori fish
Cottus pollux. (kajika). Japanese sculpin
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
Kaulkopf.



hachiku no nimono はちく(淡竹)の煮物
special boiled bamoo dish


hamairi, hamayude, hama-iri 浜いり / 浜ゆで "fish boiled at the beach"
Boiled simply in salt water, but this brings the taste of the fish to ist best.

hawasabi no sennazuke 葉わさびのせんな漬け
pickles with leaf wasabi Japanese horseradish


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ishiri ryoori いしり料理 dishes with a special fish sauce
Ishiri is made from fermented squid liver and salt. This preparation has antioxidant properties and is very healthy.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

quote
“Ishiri”, or “ishiru”いしる料理, which has been made on the Noto Peninsula since ancient times, is one of Japan’s most well known fish sauces. It is made from squid entrails or sardines. Alternating layers of fish and salt are placed in a barrel, and left to ferment for one to two years. The liquid produced this way is used to flavor soups and boiled dishes. Despite the fact that a lot of salt is used, the flavor is sweeter than it is salty. This is because a lot of amino acid is produced during the fermentation process. The sauce contains balanced amounts of glutamic acid, which produces good flavor, asparaginic acid, which produces acidity, and alanine, which produce sweetness, as well as lysine and arginine, which produce bitterness. All of these elements combine to give the sauce a sophisticated taste. Because it also contains the antioxidant taurine and lowers blood pressure, it is attracting attention as a health food.
source : shofu.pref.ishikawa.jp


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iwashi no tamago no hana sushi いわしの卯の花寿司


jibuni じぶ煮(冶部煮)boiled duck meat
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
The name comes from the sound "jibu jibu", when a different tasty broth is cooked for each ingredient. Preparing with different broths (shitagoshirae) is important.
A special kind of FU is also used, sudarebu すだれ麩. FU is a kind of gluten croutons, which here in Kaga is of a long rectangular form.
. . . CLICK here for Photos of "sudarebu" !
The final toromi with a bit of wheat flour for the broth is important.
Jibuni is served in a special jibuni wan, laquer bowl, which is rather flat to show the different ingredients.
Another source says there was a samurai Okabe Jibuemon 岡部治右衛門(じぶえもん) who invented this dish.
http://www.ajinomoto.co.jp/recipe/condition/menu/704421.asp
haiku see below
kigo for all winter


kagami mochi 鏡餅 "mirror mochi" for the new year
in red and white, koohaku, for extra good luck
CLICK here for PHOTOS !



Kaga ryoori, Kaga ryori 加賀料理 dishes from Kaga
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
Kaga renkon ryoori 加賀れんこんの料理 with lotus root
Kaga yasai ryoori 加賀野菜料理 vegetable dishes from Kaga
Kaga ryori is also famous for the Kutani plates and pots used. Motenashi no kokoro.
See below for MORE.



kaki no hazushi, sushi 柿の葉ずし sushi with persimmon leaves

kamameshi 釜飯 rice cooked in a kama bowl

kamo no jibusuki 鴨のじぶすき hodgepodge with duck meat

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konka-zuke こんか漬け /こんかづけ fish pickled in rice-bran paste
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
quote
Pickling in rice-bran paste is one of the ways of preserving fish that developed in Japan, an island country with plentiful fish. This dish is made in almost every area on the Japan Sea coast, and it has many different names. In Ishikawa Prefecture it is usually called “konka-zuke”. The fish used include sardines, herring, mackerel and blowfish. The head and entrails of large fish are removed, and the fish are cut into three fillets. Small fish are salted and then pickled in rice-bran paste as they are. Blowfish are soaked in salted water, dried, and then pickled in rice-bran paste. In Ishikawa Prefecture rice malt is often added for flavor.
source : shofu.pref.ishikawa.jp


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korogaki ころ柿 dried persimmons


matsutake マツタケ / まつたけ/ 松茸 matsutake mushrooms
Tricholoma matsutake
one of the most expensive mushrooms of Japan.
prepared as dobinmushi and other delicacies
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
Kiefernpilz


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narezushi なれ寿司(鮨)
hinezushi
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
quote
“Narezushi” is made by salting fish, pickling it with rice, and then pressing it while it undergoes lactic acid fermentation. It is a food that represents the deep connection between Southeast Asian and Japanese food culture. In the Noto region of Ishikawa it is called “narezushi”. The fish used range from river fish such as dace and sweetfish, to saltwater fish such as horse mackerel, mackerel, hachime, salmon and small sea bream. People in each region use the fish that is most familiar to them. The head and entrails are removed from small fish, and large fish are cut into fillets. After 40–50 days of pickling, the flavor is absorbed, and the bones are soft. In some households vegetables are pickled together with the fish.
source : shofu.pref.ishikawa.jp

http://www.jetro.org/trends/food_recipe.php


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Noto no kaki ryoori 能登のかき料理 oysters from the Noto peninsula


Rusk / 金沢金箔ラスク Kanazawa Kinpaku Rasuku (rusk) bread with cold foil


sazae ryoori さざえ料理 dishes with sazae conches



Suzu Salt 能登すず塩
This mineral-rich sea salt comes from the Japan Sea at the edge of Ishikawa´s Noto peninsula where the people of Suzu have been preparing it by hand for over 500 years. This handcrafted salt has a soft, luxurious flavor, and with its slightly sweet flavor, it is the perfect complement for sashimi, tempura or fried and grilled dishes. Suzu salt is also an excellent addition to soups, dressings and sauces in both western and Japanese preparations.The Japanese government officially recognizes traditionally prepared Suzu salt is as an 'intangible cultural product' of Japan. source :  www.jetro.org


tai no karamushi 鯛の唐蒸し steamed sea bream
Speciality of Kaga ryoori
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


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Kaga Ryori : (加賀料理)
Kaga cuisine, Küche aus Kaga

The mountains, hills, plains, rivers, lagoons, dunes, Sea of Japan and other sources of abundant nature in its purest form bring their rich ingredients to Kanazawa and her people. They have also, over the centuries, led to the refined sophistication that is the modern day cuisine of Kanazawa.
Kabura-zushi (salted yellowtail sandwiched between turnips), jibu-ni (stewed duck with vegetables) and tai-no-karamushi (steamed sea bream with vegetables) are worthy of special mention but to round off the satisfaction of the palate, the satisfaction of the eyes is oftentimes enhanced as such local dishes are usually served on locally produced Kutani porcelain and lacquerware.
www.att-japan.net

The most famous place is Otomo-Ro, Ootomo roo 大友楼
founded 180 years ago, The Otomo family has been the appointed cook for the Maeda daimyo.
The present owner is Otomo Satoshi 大友佐俊 (おおとも さとし)a direct descendant in the 7th generation.
Satoshi was once been invited to Vienna (Wien) to cook for the descendant of the Habsburg Queen Maria Theresia, Gräfin Camilla Habsburg, on November 2, 2007. He took two of his best cooks and the three produced Kaga Cuisine with the ingredients they could get in Vienna. He took with him a very precious laquer box which the Maeda Daimyo had used on outings. The other dishes were served on the famous AUGARTEN porcelain from the Habsburg Musuem, which lend them for this occasion. They served 11 different dishes, including a desert to go with coffee.
They used the kitchen of the private castle Schloss Seisenegg of friends of the Habsburg family and had to carry all the dishes through the corridors of the castle to the guests in the dining room. Satoshi waited on the guests and explained the Kaga food, which the 3 Europeans (Herr und Frau Seisenegg und Camilla) had to eat with chopsticks.
Kaiserkoch Satoshi Otomo, as he is called in a local German newspaper clip.
加賀百万石の「殿様の料理番」がウィーンの古城でハプスブルク家の子孫に豪華絢爛な料理絵巻で挑む料理
On Japanese TV in a 2 hour special probram.



Jibuni


One of Kanazawa’s signature dishes, Jibuni has been a traditional meal in Ishikawa for generations. In Japan, Jibuni is often prepared at the table while guests drink beer or sake and talk before serving themselves from the communal pot. This is somewhat similar to other hot-pot (nabe) style dishes, but the cooking method is somewhat unconventional even within Japan. Jibuni begins with a starch-battered duck that is chopped, bound, and steamed. This is then added to the seasoned bonito broth along with several regional vegetables and brought to a boil. As with most of Kaga cuisine’s specialty dishes, Jibuni is known for more than its savory and layered flavors and is meant to appeal to the nose and the eyes as well as to the taste buds.


ISHIRI いしり 
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
(see also above)
is a kind of soy sauce made with fish parts 魚醤油 at the Oku Noto peninsula 能登半島 and used for traditional dishes of this area. The liver of surume ika スルメイカ, iwashi sardines caught in the Tsushima Kairyuu 対馬海流 sea current are used. This sauce is also called 「いしる ishiru」、「よしり yoshiri」、「よしる yoshiru」、「塩しり shioshiri」、「塩しる shioshiru」.
And old pronounciatio of the word for fish was YO ヨ or IO いお.
shiri derived from shiru 汁, liquid.
Fish was also called I, as in the place name for the river Itoigawa 糸魚川(イトイガワ).
In Oku Noto 奥能登地方, vegetable soup is called najiri 菜汁(ナジリ).
In the Noto peninsula, a lot of salt is also produced since olden times.

There is also Ishiri Ponzu.

WASHOKU : Soy Sauce , Sojasoße, Sojasauce 醤油



Kaga vegetables 加賀野菜 Kaga yasai
Vegetables from Ishikawa prefecture
CLICK for more photos
15 types of vegetables have been grown in the area since 1945 and before. They grow in the Kaga plain and have the good water of Mount Hakusan.

aka kabocha 赤かぼちゃ. 赤皮甘栗南瓜 red-skinned pumpkin
Utsugi akagaw amakuri kabocha
打木赤皮甘栗かぼちゃ(うつぎ・あかがわあまぐり‐)
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
roter Hokkaidokürbis aus Kaga

akazuiki 赤ずいき red taro stems
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

Gensuke daikon 源助大根(げんすけだいこん) Big Radish
A special variety grown first by Inoue Gensuke 井上源助.

Gorojima kintoki 五郎島金時 sweet potatos from Gorojima Town
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
It has less fiber than other varieties of Japan and is sweeter. Used to make monburan モンブラン sweet cakes from August to November.

Futazuka karashina 二塚からしな(ふたつか‐)
karashina "mustard leaf" from Futatsuka
Brassica juncea, Senfkraut.

heta murasaki nasu ヘタ紫なす violet eggplants
eggplants, "green to the stem". also called
marunasu 丸なす "round eggplants"


Kaga futo kyuuri 加賀太ぎゅうり(かが・ふと‐)
thick cucumbers from Kaga

Kaga tsurumame 加賀つるまめ green beans
Stangenbohne, Phaseolus vulgaris

Kanazawa ippon futonegi 金沢一本太ねぎ
thick leek from Kanazawa
dickre Lauch aus Kanazawa

Kanazawa shungiku 金沢春菊
Mutterkraut aus Kanazawa. From October to April.
Chrysanthemum coronarium


kinjiso, kinjisoo 金時草(きんじそう)
Gynura bicolor . Kinjisoo-Blattgemuese
It has zigzagshaped leaves and the color of the front is green, where as the backside is a sparkling "kintoki 金時" bright red-violett color. Hence the name, which resembles the kintoki sasage 金時ささげ mame, red-violett beans.
Kinjiso is rich in vitamins a, B1, B2, calium, iron, calcium and others.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

kuwai くわい arrowhead
Sagittaria trifolia. Pfeilkraut

maruimo, maru-imo, 丸いも round yam root
Dioscorea japonica
„Runde Jamswurzel“

renkon, Kaga renkon 加賀レンコン/ 加賀れんこん
Lotos roots from Kaga
Lotus aus Kaga

satsumaimo , satsuma imo さつまいも sweet potatos

seri セリ, せり, 芹
Brunnenkresse. Japanische Petersilie. Oenanthe javanica

takenoko たけのこ bamboo shoots
From April to May.


Other traditional vegetables

aoshima uri, kata uri 青シマ瓜(かた瓜)
... mino uri みの瓜
... nashi uri, ama uri なし瓜(あま瓜)
gourds

Dentooji satoimo 伝灯寺里芋 sato imo from temple Dentoji

Kaga hakusai 加賀白菜 chinese cabbage from Kaga
Kaga fushinari kyuuri 加賀節成きゅうり(かが・ふしなり‐)
cucumbers from Kaga

Mitani akigyuuri 三谷秋胡瓜(みたに・あきぎゅうり)
autumn cucumbers from Mitani

Tsurugisaki 剣崎辛長なんば

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seafood from Kaga
crabs are eaten from November onward.
zuwaigani, male snow crabs. female crabs, which are half the size, are called "kobakogani" こばこ蟹.
kani no koorayaki 蟹甲羅焼き

buri 鰤 yellowtail
buri daikon ぶり大根 yellowtail with radish
. . . CLICK here for Photos of BURI DAIKON !
buri no tataki 鰤たたき
buri no shioyaki 鰤塩焼き

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kaburazushi, kabura-zushi カブラ寿司, 蕪ずし]
salted yellowtail sandwiched between turnips
The most representative food in winter in Kanazawa. The name is SUSHI, but it is a sort of pickled food and special taste for every home. Thick slices of salted turnips are cut open and a slice of salted yellowtail is sandwiched inbetween. The whole is marinated in rice and rice malt. It is prepared to be eaten about 2 weeks after the preparation, so it can ferment to the proper taste. Essential for the New Year food.
Fermentierte Rüben und Gelbschwanz
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

quote
“Kabura-zushi” and “daikon-zushi” are representative winter foods of the Kaga region of Ishikawa Prefecture, derived from “narezushi” . “Kabura-zushi” is made by cutting turnip into round slices, which are pickled in salt. Salted yellowtail fillets are sandwiched between the pickled turnip slices, and pickled with a mixture of rice and rice malt. “Daikon-zushi” is made from daikon radish and re-hydrated dried herring. The fermentation process is affected by the temperature, and by the amount of pickling salt used, so it is difficult to judge the length of time for pickling. The acidity produced by lactic acid fermentation and the mild sweetness of the rice malt, combined with the flavor of the fish, make this dish popular as an accompaniment to sake.
source : shofu.pref.ishikawa.jp


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CLICK for many more photos

Kanazawa no Wagashi 金沢に和菓子
Tea sweets from Kanazawa, Japanese confections


The tea ceremony has old roots in Kanazawa. The expressions of the four seasons are rooted deep with the people. Not only the taste, but the seasonal look of the sweets is attractive. The tradition has been supported by "sweets craftsmen" for a long time. It is part of the culture of Kanazawa.
The tea ceremony and with it the wagashi sweets, has flourished in Kyoto, Matsue (Shimane) and Kanazawa.
The first daimyo, Maeda Toshiie 前田利家 (1538―99), was a close friend of Hideyoshi and had experienced the tea ceremony with him. His eldest son, Maeda Toshinaga 前田利長 (1562―1614) had studied TEA with the great tea master Sen no Rikyu 千利休. The third daimyo of the Maeda clan, Toshitsune 利常, studied TEA with master Kobori Enshu 小堀遠州 and Sensoosen Sooshitsu 仙叟千宗室(せんそうせんのそうしつ). The fifth daimyo was also involved in TEA,especially the collection of tea untenils (cha doogu 道茶具).
Therefore even the normal people of the town of Kanazawa learned about tea and its importance in Japanese culture.
Japanese sweets are made with images of seasonal natural features from raw materials, such as rice, red beans and wasanbon sugar from Shikoku.

The first tea sweets were made when Toshiie came to Kanazawa in 1590. Then he appointed a sweet maker for his castle, 堂後屋三郎衛門. Another appointed sweet maker, 樫田吉蔵, was the first to came up with the idea of making sweets in five colors (goshiki namagashi)五色生菓子 in 1600, when princess Tamahime 珠姫 (second daughter of Tokugawa Hidetada) came as bride for his younger brother Toshitsune to Kanazawa.
White riceflower manjuu with sweet bean paste are colored red to represent the rising sun. Brown Sesame cover is the moon behind the clouds. Diamond-shaped manjuu represent the waves of the sea. Yellow grains are the full moon in its splendor. Red bean paste on the outside of a cake represent the land and country side with the farmers.

CLICK for original LINK
In 1630 Toshitsune had ordered to make some dry sweets (higashi) rakugan with the decorative inscripton of the name of Chooseiden (choseiden) 長生殿
wirtten by famous calligrafer Kobori Enshu.
They are now one of the three most famous sweets of Japan!
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


The people of Kanazawa were also very pious and there are many temples in town. The sweets of the daimyo were soon used for religious ceremonies too and thus among the common people. Especially rakugan dry sweets, Manjuu and Mochi were favorites.
There are sweets for all seasons and all seasonal religious festivals
CLICK for more tsujiuranai
tsuji uranai, Fortune Cookies
for the new year fuku-ume 福梅and tsuji uranai 辻占
. . . CLICK here for FUKU UME Photos !
Fuku-ume, the "Auspicious plum" comes as a wafer in red and white. Tee plum blossom is in the family crest of the Maeda clan. This is eaten for the New Year.


CLICK for more KINKATOO photos
for Dolls festival. kinkatoo 金花糖
(forms of fish like tai and koi made of sugar)
„Goldener Blumen-Zucker“


in summer 氷室饅頭 himuro "ice cellar manjuu"
Eaten on the first day of the 7th month (himuro no tsuitachi)
They are of white and red color and eaten with the wish for good health during the following year. Made from barley flower. In Kaga it was custom to open the ice cellars (himuro) on the first day of the 6th month (now June 30). The ice, which was collected in winter from pure wter ponds, was put on carts and transported hastily to the Shogun in Edo.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

for Star festival. sasagemochi ささげ餅 with beans
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


sweets for all family celebrations
to pray for a save childbirth ころころ団子 korokoro dango
. . . CLICK here for korokoro dango Photos !
to pray for the birth of a boy 杵巻き and kinchaku mochi 巾着餅

for a marriage ceremony 五色生菓子 "raw sweets in five colors"
sweets in five varieties
. . . CLICK here for "Five Colored Sweets" Photos !


sweets for temples and shrines 寺社菓子
sweets for good luck 縁起菓子
. . . CLICK here for "good luck sweets" Photos !

sweets for celebrations 祝い菓子
. . . CLICK here for "celebration sweets" Photos !

sweets for the changing of seasons 四季折々の菓子


chitose 千歳(ちとせ)"Ten thousand years"
This sweet-bean dumpling is wrapped in a dough with rice flour and pink and white sugar, which is transparent, representing the glow of sunrise and snow on Mount Fuji.


Daruma Museum
Fukutoku Senbei 福徳せんべい Lucky Waffles


sugar used for the Kanazawa sweets
wasanbon 和三盆 Japanese sugar from Shikoku
Japanischer Zucker


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Otome no Kanazawa
Book about cafes, sweets and more
(and a Daruma on the cover ! )


source : 乙女の金沢



Online References

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Worldwide use


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Things found on the way



Shichirin 七輪 portable cooking stove
kiridashi shichirin 切り出し七輪 from the Noto peninsula 能登
are cut out of one piece of earth. They come in round or oblong forms for sanma fish.
. . . CLICK here for Photos of Noto Shichirin !


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kigo for early summer

Hyakumangoku Matsuri 金沢百万石まつり
Hyakumangoku Festival

Oyama matsuri 尾山祭(おやままつり)Oyama Shrine Festival
hyakumangoku gyooretsu 百万石行列(ひゃくまんごくぎょうれつ)
hookoku matsuri 封国祭(ほうこくまつり)"land presenting festival"
(Lord Maeda gave land to his retainers to govern.)

June 13 to 15
Main Festival at the shrine Oyama Jinja 尾山神社 .
. . . CLICK here for Photos of the Shrine !



Held on the first Sunday in June in memory of the entry of the daimyo Maeda Toshiie to Kanazawa Castle in 1583.
The main event is the splendid Hakumangoku Gyoretsu, a long procession of people dressed in samurai costumes. The parade walks around the area between Kanazawa Station and Kanazawa Castle Park.
http://www.100mangoku.net/

- quote -
Oyama Shrine (尾山神社, Oyama Jinja) is dedicated to Maeda Toshiie, the first lord of the powerful, local Maeda Clan. The shrine was constructed in 1599 by Toshiie's successor, Maeda Toshinaga on Mount Utatsu. It was later moved to its present location.

Oyama Shrine is known for its unusual gate, which was designed by a Dutch architect, using elements of European and Asian religious themes. While the first story displays a mixture of Japanese and Chinese influence, the upper stories once served as a lighthouse and feature a Dutch style, stained glass window.



The gate originally guarded the entrance to the palace of Kanazawa Castle, and was only later moved to Oyama Shrine. On the shrine grounds stands a statue of Lord Toshiie. There is also a nice strolling garden with ponds and bridges, designed to resemble harps and lutes.
- source : japan-guide.com -

- Homepage of the shrine
金沢市尾山町11-1
- source : oyama-jinja.or.jp -


. Kanazawa no kachi kabuto 金沢のかち兜 / 勝兜 winning helmet .
in memory of the entry of the daimyo Maeda Toshiie to Kanazawa Castle in 1583.

. WKD : Saijiki for Festivals and Ceremonies

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HAIKU


反古凧や隣は前田加賀守
hogo-dako ya tonari wa Maeda Kaga no Kami

kite from waste paper -
and right next to it the kite
of Lord Maeda from Kaga


Kobayashi Issa 小林一茶



Haiga by source : Nakamura Sakuo

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夕立と加賀もぱっぱと飛にけり
yuudachi to kaga mo pappa to tobi ni keri

the cloudburst
and the Kaga messengers
flew right by

Tr. Chris Drake

This hokku was written in the 6th month (July) of 1815, when Issa was in his hometown or traveling around to nearby towns to see students. Since his hometown and many other nearby towns were located on the main post road connecting Edo in the east with northern provinces on the Japan Sea coast, much traffic and mail between Edo and the west coast of Honshu passed through them.

In the present hokku a cloudburst soaks the post road and the area around it, but it is a small storm apparently consisting of a single cloud, and it quickly moves on. Around the same time, a group of official fast couriers (hikyaku 飛脚, lit. "flying legs") from the big Kaga domain (Kaga no Chiyo's home) on the Japan Sea pass through on their way to Edo. Since it is the hot 6th month (July), they are probably the famous Kaga express couriers carrying a large, thick container full of carefully wrapped and preserved ice from the Kaga mountains that will be delivered to the Edo mansion of the daimyo lord of Kaga, where some of it will be eaten as a kind of sherbet. The best pieces of ice will of course be presented to the shogun and his advisors. The jogging couriers work in teams that change at various stations, and they carry the container day and night, delivering the ice to Edo before it melts. If they went through the town where Issa is at the same time as the downpour, they no doubt kept walking quickly or jogging right through the rain, with one man warning the villagers not to stand in the way, and if they arrived after the rain, when more people were walking on the road, one of the group no doubt roughly ordered everyone on the road to step back so the messengers could pass through at top speed.

The time of the hokku seems to be shortly after both the cloudburst and the express couriers have quickly passed through. By pointing to a parallel between the fast-moving storm cloud and the flying feet of the fast couriers, Issa may well be suggesting that the way the arrogant couriers storm through the town as if it were nothing but a hindrance to them expresses the basic attitude of the corrupt, luxury-loving samurai ruling class toward lowly commoners, an attitude that in some ways is similar to the damage that can be done by hard rainstorms. Luckily, on this day, both storms seem to have been short and passed through quickly.

I follow the suggestion of Maruyama Kazuhiko (Seventh Diary 2.147) that Kaga in the second line may refer to Kaga domain express messengers. The rough, blunt use of only Kaga (something like "that Kaga bunch") makes it a bit difficult to see a reference here to the daimyo lord of Kaga, since Issa normally refers to him as a lord, using "Kaga-dono," "Kaga no kami," or "Maeda Kaga no kami." Moreover, the Kaga domain was one of the richest in Japan, and Kaga lords sought to glorify themselves by making large, spectacular processions whenever they had to travel to Edo. Their long processions usually included 3,000-4,000 men, and their movements were grave, deliberate, formal and unlikely to impress onlookers as "flying." In such processions, the daimyo lord himself rode unseen in a large weatherproof palanquin and wouldn't have been affected by mere rainstorms unless he had to get out of the palanquin. On the other hand, the "flying feet" of the fast ice couriers and their condescending attitude make a clear parallel with the short downpour.

Maruyama reads the calligraphy for the verb in the third line as tobi- (飛), to fly, not as sugi- (過), to pass by, so he finds no calligraphy mistake by Issa here that needs to be corrected. In informal calligraphy both characters can look very similar.


source : chasukechan/nk
加賀藩の将軍家献上のお氷さまの駕籠行列

The picture shows a group of fast-walking Kaga express couriers carrying a double-walled container of specially wrapped Kaga ice to Edo in the middle of the night in summer. The man in the lead carries a torch.

Chris Drake

. Kobayashi Issa 小林一茶 in Edo .


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じぶ煮椀鴨と豆腐が寄り添へる     
jibuni wan kamo to toofu ga yori-soreu

a bowl of jibuni ...
duck and tofu
side by side

Satake San 佐竹絋栄


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朱の椀の両手に温きじぶ煮かな   
shu no wan no ryoote ni atataki jibuni kana

a red laquer bowl
keeps both my hands warm ...
aaa, this jibuni

Sakura Toshiko 桜敏子

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Related words

***** WASHOKU : Regional Japanese Dishes
lotus
***** . Folk Toys from Ishikawa Ishikawa Folk Art - 石川県 .

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5/08/2008

Hyogo Prefecture

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Hyogo Prefecture (Hyoogo) 兵庫


Hyōgo Prefecture (兵庫県, Hyōgo-ken) is a prefecture of Japan located in the Kansai region on Honshū island. The capital is Kobe.
The prefecture's name was previously alternately spelled as Hiogo.

Present-day Hyōgo Prefecture includes the former provinces of Harima, Tajima, Awaji, and parts of Tamba and Settsu.

In 1180, near the end of the Heian Period, Emperor Antoku, Taira no Kiyomori, and the Imperial court moved briefly to Fukuhara, in what is now the city of Kobe. There the capital remained for five months.

Himeji Castle, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is in the city of Himeji.

The Ako Han, home of the 47 Ronin, is in Hyōgo Prefecture.

Southern Hyōgo Prefecture was severely devastated by the magnitude 7.2 Great Hanshin earthquake of 1995, which destroyed major parts of Kobe and Awaji, as well as Takarazuka and neighboring Osaka prefecture, killing nearly 5500 people.

Hyōgo Prefecture has many heavy industries, metal and medical, and Kobe is one of the largest ports in Japan.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



Izumo Kaido 出雲街道 The Old Trade Road of Izumo
It starts in Himeji.


Daruma Dolls from Himeji and more about Himeji Castle.

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Regional dishes from Hyogo 兵庫の郷土料理
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



aamonod toosuto アアモンドトースト toast with almonds
the almonds are hacked to small pieces, some sugar and butter is added and all is toasted for a sweet breakfast snack.
This dish was brought to Himeji by a coffe maker, who ate it in America and told about this to his local coffee shop owner, in about 1950. Now it is part of the Himeji morning culture.




Akashi dai 明石ダイ Tai sea bream from Akashi
The sea around Akashi 明石海峡 is full of nutrition for seafood and fish.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


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Akashiyaki 明石焼 / 明石焼き octopus dumplings from Akashi
Akashi no tamagoyaki 明石の卵焼き
In the local dialect, Akashiyaki is called "tamagoyaki 玉子焼", fried egg.
It is made from wheat, eggs and pieces of fresh Akashi octopus. It is fried in a special pan to make round balls. They are dipped in a dashi broth made from kombu.
Takoyaki たこ焼き is a festival fare all over Japan.


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. Arima onsen 有馬温泉 Arima Hot Spring .

Matsutake Konbu 松茸昆布 
Japanese mushroom and sea weeds

tansan senbei 炭酸センベイ carbonated crackers

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botan nabe ボタン鍋 hodgepodge with wild boar
"peony hodgepodge" for the pious Buddhists
with meat from the wild boars of the Tanba Sasayama 丹波篠山 area.
This area is also famous for the large sweet chestnuts 丹波栗.
There is a famous folk song about this hodgepodge.
雪がちらちら丹波の里で、猪が飛び込むぼたん鍋
yuki ga chirachira Tanbo no sato de
shishi ga tobikomu botan nabe




densuke でんすけ big eel dishes
densuke anago でんすけ穴子 / 伝助穴子
especially large sea eel from the Harima Nada Open Sea 播磨灘.
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ikanago no kugini いかなごのくぎ煮 boiled sand eel
Ammodytes personatus
speciality of Akashi. The boiled small fish look like a nail, hence the name, meaning "boiled nails"
Once simmered, it can be kept for a long time and is rich in calcium.
Sand lance
japanischer Sandaal
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


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Kobe biifu 神戸ビーフ(ステーキ) Kobe Beef steak
Kobe beef (神戸ビーフ, Kōbe Bīfu)
refers to beef from the black Tajima-ushi breed of Wagyu cattle, raised according to strict tradition in Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. Kobe beef is renowned for its flavour, tenderness, and fatty well-marbled texture. Kobe beef can be prepared as steak, sukiyaki, shabu shabu, sashimi, teppanyaki and more.

Kobe beef in Japan is registered trademark by Kobe beef distribution promotion conference.[2] It must fulfill all the conditions as follows:[3]

Tajima cattle born in Hyōgo Prefecture
Fed by farm in Hyōgo Prefecture
Bullock or Virgin cow, meant to purify the beef
Processed at slaughterhouse in Kobe, Nishinomiya, Sanda, Kakogawa and Himeji in Hyōgo Prefecture.
Marbling ratio called BMS[4] is level 6 and above.
Meat Quality Score[4] is A or B
Gross weight of beef is 470 kg or below.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !

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Beef (gyuuniku) Rindfleisch




Koobe wain 神戸ワイン wine from Kobe city
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
Kobe City took the initiative to by developing regional agriculture and tourism with independent wineries as well has launching city-brand products.
Major wine producing regions of Japan



Kobe wain karee 神戸ワインカレー beef curry with Kobe wine
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


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Himeji 姫路名物『お城やき』O-Shiro-Yaki
Castle waffles



Izushi Soba 出石そば



kanisuki, kani suki カニすき hodgepodge with crabs
The famous matsubagani 松葉ガニ from the Sea of Japan side of the prefecture are used.
They are a kind of large zuwaigani queen crabs.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !




katsumeshi, katsu-meshi かつめし cutelett on rice
from Kakogawa 加古川市
Cooked rice is places on a plate, then a cutelett from beef is placed on it, cut in mouthsize pieces and covered with a demiglace sauce. It is eaten with chopsticks in a strange mix of east meets west.
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kuromameni, kuromame-ni 黒豆煮 boiled black beans
from the Tanba region 丹波地方 (Tamba), which is most famous for these black beans.
They are quite large and the outer skin does not break open during cooking. Essential ingredient for the New Year dishes.
WASHOKU ... kuromame dishes




okonomiyaki お好み焼き "Japanese pizza", Japanese omelett
eaten with sauce and mayonnaise



sabazushi, saba sushi 鯖寿司 mackerel sushi
Made with fish from the Akashi sea and around Awaji Island.


Somen そうめん、素麺 thin noodles



Tajima gyuu 但馬牛 beef from Tajima



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HAIKU


- - - - - Matsuo Basho - - - - -

蛸壺やはかなき夢を夏の月
takotsubo ya hakanaki yume o natsu no tsuki

an octopus pot ---
inside, a short-lived dream
under the summer moon

Tr. Ueda

- in memory of the Heike clan, who perished at Suma beach

. WKD : Octopus (tako 蛸) .





蝸牛 角ふりわけよ 須磨明石
katatsuburi tsuno furiwake yo Suma Akashi

The land snail waving
his horns, stretched out between
Suma and Akashi!


Which is prefaced by,
“The distance between Suma and Akashi is so close that we can reach it by crawling. Now I understand it.”
In fact, Akashi is about 12 km to the west of Suma. Basho in all probability derived his haiku from the Tale of Genji, chapter Suma, and from Chuang-tzu's story of “the Fighting on the Horns of a Snail.” It has also been said to come from a poem of Po Chu I, which I have been unable to trace.
- Tr. and Comment - Bill Wyatt

. Basho - in Suma Ura Park 須磨浦公園 .



足洗うてつひ明けやすき丸寝かな
ashi aroote tsui akeyasuki marune kana

I washed my feet
and already the night is over
after a good sleep . . .


Basho was on his last spot of the journey in the summer of 1688 貞亨5年夏. He had reached his lodgings and was looking forward to a long sleep, but the short nights of summer . . .
The cut marker KANA is at the end of line 3.


月はあれど留守のやうなり須磨の夏 
tsuki aredo rusu no yoo nari Suma no natsu

Though the moon is full
there seems an absence -
Suma in summer

Tr. Aitken


Written in 元禄元年, Basho age 45

There is a famous waka
またなくあはれなるものは、かかる所(須磨の浦)の秋なりけり


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月見ても物足らはずや須磨の夏 
tsuki mite mo mono tarawazu ya Suma no natsu

the moon still is
though it seems far from home
Suma in summer

Tr. Barnhill

Written in 元禄元年, Basho age 45


Oi no Kobumi 笈の小文
. Matsuo Basho 松尾芭蕉 - Archives of the WKD .


. WKD : akeyasushi 明易し "dawn comes early" .
kigo for summer


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honobono to Akashi no ura no asagiri ni
shima kagureyuku fune o shizo omou

ほのぼのと明石の浦の朝霧に 
島隠れ行く舟をしぞ思ふ

Faintly with the dawn
That glimmers on Akashi Bay,
In the morning mist
A boat goes hidden by the isle -
And my thoughts go after it.

Tr. Edwin A. Cranston

. 柿本人麻呂 Kakinomoto Hitomaro .
Hitomaru 人丸 / 人麿 / Waka poet, (c. 662 – 710)


ほのぼのと明石が浦のなまこ哉
hono-bono to akashi ga ura no namako kana

gliding dimly
in Akashi Bay...
a sea slug


Or: "sea slugs."
Robin D. Gill points out that this haiku alludes to a traditional waka poem about a boat drifting off into the mist, vanishing among the rocky islands of Akashi Bay. The poem begins: hono-bono to akashi no ura no asa giri ni... ("Dimly in the morning mist of Akashi Bay...").
For Robin's discussion, see Rise, Ye Sea Slugs (Key Biscayne, Florida: Paraverse Press, 2003) 281-83. Shinji Ogawa adds that the waka is #409 of the Kokinshu. "Knowing the beautiful poetic scene, Issa replaced the boat with a sea slug."
A wonderful comic twist.
- - - - - Tr. and comment : David Lanoue

. Kobayashi Issa 小林一茶 in Edo .

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Related words

***** WASHOKU : Regional Japanese Dishes

***** . Folk Toys from HYOGO - Kobe, Himeji .
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