Showing posts sorted by date for query yakisoba. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query yakisoba. Sort by relevance Show all posts

5/06/2008

Fujisan Specialities

[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO TOP . ]
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Mount Fujisan, Fujiyama

***** Location: Japan
***** Season: See below
***** Category: Earth


*****************************
Explanation


CLICK for more photos

Mount Fuji (富士山, Fuji-san),
is the highest mountain in Japan at 3,776 m (12,388 ft). Along with Mount Tate and Mount Haku, it is one of Japan's "Three Holy Mountains" (三霊山 Sanreizan). An active volcano that last erupted in 1707–08, Mount Fuji straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi prefectures just west of Tokyo, from which it can be seen on a clear day. It is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshū. Three small cities surround it: Gotemba (south), Fujiyoshida (north) and Fujinomiya (southwest).
Mount Fuji's exceptionally symmetrical cone is a well-known symbol of Japan and it is frequently depicted in art and photographs, as well as visited by sightseers and climbers.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


Fujisan overlooks the Kanto plain.
He was north of Edo and was a protective deity, symbolized also in the "Genbu 玄武
black warrior" of Chinese lore.
"Tozai Nanboku 東西南北 The Four Heavenly Directions

There were many "Mount Fuji worship groups" in Edo, "Devotional Fuji confraternities" (Fujiko(fujikoo, fujikou 富士講).
Worshiping the mountain from the north (modern day Tokyo) would be considered an Edo religion.
The Fuji Asama Shrine in Asakusa


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


Let us look at some food specialities with FUJISAN.


富士山新五合目のレストハウス Resthouse at the 5th station
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



Fujisan karee 富士山名物カレー "Curry a la Fujisan"
The rice is heaped like a little mountain top
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



Fuji no kokemomo 富士のこけもも
"Bilberries from Mount Fuji"

A sweet of the rakugan pressed sugar type. Each stick is pressed in a wooden form by hand.
kokemomo , lit. "peach from the moss", is a bilberry (cowberry, Preiselbeere) that grows in the area and the berries are prepared to a paste (an). These sweets with their red and white color make an auspicious present for the New Year.


苔桃も節句に逢ふや赤い花
kokemomo mo sekku ni au ya akai hana

bilberries too
for the Boy's festival -
red flowers


Kobayashi Issa


kokemomo no hana 苔桃の花 (こけもものはな)
flowers of the bilberry
kigo for late spring
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


kokemomo 苔桃 (こけもも) bilberry, Preiselbeere
kokemomo no mi 苔桃の実(こけもものみ)bilberry berries
Vaccinium vitis-idaea
kigo for early autumn




kokemomo sofuto こけももソフト
soft ice cream with bilberries


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



Fuji manjuu 冨士饅頭 
Manju cakes in the form of Fujisan
For the outside flower from mochigome is used.



富士山名物 小麦まんじゅう
komugi manjuu 小麦まんじゅう manju made from wheat
They look white like snow.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


富士山育ちのニジマス trout from Mt. Fuji

CLICK for more photos
Fujisan masu no sushi 富士山ますの寿し
sushi with trout from the clear waters of rivers from Fujisan



masu baaga 富士宮 虹鱒 マスバーガー
trout hamburger from Fujinomiya Town
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


CLICK for more photos
Fujisan meronpan 富士山メロンパン melon bread
Mount Fuji Melon Pan
With the snow on the top.
Sold at many local bakeries and at the 5. Station.


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


CLICK for more photos
Fuji no mizu 富士の水 bottled water from Mount Fuji


富士山美水 Fujisan Bisui Brand
"beautiful water from Fuji"
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



Fuji sabure 富士サブレー butter cookies "Fuji"
in the form of Fujisan with almonds and a white top. They come in a box in the mountain shape.



富士山さぶれ butter bisquits


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


Fuji sanchoo 富士山頂 "top of Mount Fuji"


also called
oppai manjuu おっぱい饅頭 "nipples manju"


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



Fuji wain 冨士ワイン wine called "Mt. Fuji"
From Yamanashi


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



Mt. Fuji Yokan (富士山羊羹)
matcha green tea and sweet beans jelly
by Kindaruma Japanese sweet shop, Kawaguchiko, Yamanashi

- source : Just Love Japan - facebook -

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


CLICK for more photos

Fujisan Yakisoba 富士山焼きそば fried noodles
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


Fujinomiya Yakisoba 富士宮焼きそば
This town is famous for its yakisoba fried noodles.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


Fujinomiya nijimasu baagaa 富士宮 虹鱒 マスバーガー
trout hamburger from Fujinomiya Town. masu baagaa
. . . CLICK here for Photos !





Fuji yakimeshi senbei 焼きめしせんべい
Rice crackers
With sweet soy sauce flavor

. . . . .

The town of Fuji at the foot of Mount Fuji is using Kaguyahime as a tourist attraction.
The story goes that her prince came after her and they lived happily in a stone cave in the mountain, which is named FUJI 不死 Mountain where you do not die.


Kaguyahime chazuke 富士かぐや姫茶漬け bowl of rice with tea
. Kaguyahime .  


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


CLICK for more photos
Fujisan yamamori 富士山盛り
buckwheat noodles

extra large portion "like a mountain" yamamori


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



Yoogantoo 溶岩糖 "Lava Sugar" sweets
The red ones remind us of the still burning lava.


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



Fuji no Yuki 富士の雪 "Snow on Mount Fuji" Tofu
a kind rough yosedofu よせ豆腐, prepared with the fresh water of Mt. Fuji


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


CLICK for more
Furoshiki


富士山土産 Fujisan o-Miyage souvenirs
More Photos of famous FUJI souvenirs
Reisemitbringsel


*****************************
Worldwide use


*****************************
Things found on the way


EXTERNAL LINKS

fujibrand.jp/brand/gourmet/index.html



*****************************
HAIKU and SENRYU


Fuji, Mt. Fuji, Fujiyama, Fujisan
Mount Fuji and Haiku



hatsu Fuji 初富士 first view of Mt. Fuji
kigo for the New Year


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


source : www.shinmura.co.jp

Fujisan Nabe 富士山鍋 pot to heat food

*****************************
Related words

***** WASHOKU : Regional Japanese Dishes



[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

5/01/2008

Aomori Prefecture

[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO TOP . ]
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Aomori

Aomori Prefecture (青森県, Aomori-ken) is a prefecture of Japan located in the Tōhoku Region. The capital is the city of Aomori.

Aomori Prefecture is the northernmost prefecture on Honshū and faces Hokkaidō across the Tsugaru Strait. It borders Akita and Iwate in the south. Oma, at the northwestern tip of the axe-shaped Shimokita Peninsula, is the northernmost point of Honshū. The Shimokita and Tsugaru Peninsulas enclose Mutsu Bay. Between those peninsulas lies the Natsudomari Peninsula, the northern end of the Ōu Mountains. The three peninsulas are prominently visible in the prefecture's symbol, a stylized map.

Lake Towada, a crater lake, straddles Aomori's boundary with Akita.

Like much of Tōhoku, the Aomori region remains dominated by traditional industries such as farming, forestry, and fishing.

Hirosaki Castle is most beautiful in spring with the cherry blossoms.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !

- - - Eight local culinary specialties from Hirosaki

Kenoshiru
Miso-seasoned ingredients baked in a shell (Kaiyakimiso)
Hirosaki Igamenchi
Jappajiru
Tsugaru Buckwheat Noodles
Codfish dressed with salted cod roe (Tara-no-koae)
Green peppers pickled in a bottle (Namban-no-isshozuke)
Dengaku with bent bamboo shoots
- source : en.hkg.jp/local


CLICK for more
Nebuta festival floats

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


CLICK for more photos

ringo 青森りんご apples and Aomori

Aomori produces more apples than any other place in Japan, especially in the plains of Tsugaru at the foot of Mount Iwaki.
Apple Orchards near Hirosaki City
In spring they are pollinated by hand and later covered in bags to grow unharmed.

Right after the war, one of the most popular aongs in Japan was the "Apple Song" and people used apples to sweeten a lot of food.
Then bananas, strawberries and other fruit came to the market and Aomori apples lost some of their appeal, but later recovered when the type FUJI was marketed.

beni tsugaru 紅つがる "red apple from Tsugaru"
The fruit is oblong, without crowning. The flesh of the apple is creamy white, very juicy, lightly flavored, and moderately sweet. It has low acidity and very little browning.

ringo no shiozuke リンゴの塩漬け whole apples pickled in salt
ringo no shisomaki リンゴの紫蘇巻き apple slices in red perilla leaves
,,,, shisomaki ringo しそ巻リンゴ

ringomeshi リンゴ飯 rice cooked with apple pieces
This was often prepared during the war when people did not have enough rice to feed the children.



国光りんご

sekai ichi
san fuji
jona goorudo
Mutsu
Fuji (after 1969)
Hokuto 北斗

Ralls Janet
Starking Delicious

"Pedigreed apples" are shipped with a detailed cultivation record.



Hatoyama apples 鳩山 リンゴ
from Hirozaki, October 2009


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


Dazai bentoo だざい弁当 lunchbox a la Dazai
- - - Dazai Osamu, 太宰治 Writer 1909 - 1948 - - -
at the train station
Goshokawahara station Aomori 青森県五所川原市
Includes all the local dishes which the author had loved, especially thin bamboo shoots (nemagaridake 根曲がり竹). Herring and scallops boiled in soy sauce and many other delicacies.

CLICK here for PHOTOS !

Other lunchboxes from the station
「ストーブ弁当」stove lunchbox
「いなほ弁当」rice ears lunchbox
「さくら弁当」cherry blossom lunchbox

Dazai Lunchbox was made in the year 2009 to celebrate the 100 birthday of Dazai.


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


CLICK for more photos


makkoichi マッコ市 market with a present
On the second sunday in January (formerly it used to be the 15th, the "small New Year Day". Almost all stores in the town of Kuroishi give a special packet to the customers. The sales start at 5:30 in the morning, to give people time to go shopping before going to work.


::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


akahata mochi あかはたもち akahata fish mochi
aka hata 赤羽太 red grouper, Epinephelus morio

. . . CLICK here for Photos !


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


banana バナナ
The people of Aomori eat the most bananas in Japan.

banana saidaa バナナサイダー drink, banana cider

banana monaka バナナモナカ waffles in the form of banana
they do not taste like bananas, but are made of white anko.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



chawanmushi 茶碗蒸し stocked egg and dashi
with sween chestnuts, kuri no kanroni 栗の甘露煮

.......................................................................

ensoo kyuuri no shooyuzuke 塩蔵きゅうりの醤油漬け
salted cucumber pickles
also with added garlic




:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


hariharizuke はりはり漬け
with kiriboshi daikon radish
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


hokke no sushi ほっけのすし Atka mackerel sushi


hookaiori, hookai ori 法界折 lunchbox as offering for the ancestors
It is placed in front of the grave during the o-bon ancestoral festivities. Sometimes the whole family sits on a straw mat in front of the grave and all eat from the lunchbox after it has been offered to the ancestor's spirit.



hotategai no misoyaki ほたて貝の味噌焼 hotate scallops grilled with miso
The scallops from Mutsu bay have a special clear and delicous taste.


ichigo-ni, ichigoni いちご煮 "boiled strawberries"
seafood stew with sea urchins and abalones
eaten mostly in summer.
The name of this stew comes from its color. Sea urchins and abalone are put in hot water or a dashi broth and brought to a boil. It is seasoned with salt and a little soy sauce, and sprinkled with finely chopped green shiso leaves. The pink of the sea urchin is thought to evoke the color of strawberries in the dawn mist.
It is usually eaten on formal occasions along the coast of Tohoku.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


ikameshi イカ飯 squid with rice
ika soomen いかそうめん squid with somen noodles
ika no sushi いかのすし squid sushi. This is stuffed squid with vegetables and the legs squeezed in at last. There is no rice
and
ikazushi イカ寿司
without rice, see SUSHI



inarizushi いなり寿司 PINK Inari-Sushi from Tsugaru
made with sugar and is pink inside, because sweat vinegared pink ginger (beni shooga 紅生姜) is chopped finely and put inside.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


jappajiru, jappa jiru じゃっぱ汁 soup with codfish
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
- quote
Available: November-March
Jappajiru is a traditional winter dish that is highly popular among the locals.
It is a one-pot dish (the variety called in Japanese 'nabe'), in which all the parts that get usually thrown away when cooking fish such as the head, bones, skin, and entrails are cut to the easily eatable size and cooked together with vegetables. This dish is a true gem of the wisdom of people of Hirosaki, who really know how to put whatever is at hand to the most effective use. The rich broth made with the head, bones, and skin of the fish is gives a taste so thick and rich, one simply cannot create if only the meat of the fish is used.
The soup is thickly seasoned with salt and bean paste, and is savored together with the bones covered with fish meat, which is said to be the most delicious part.
The peculiar name of the soup, Jappa-jiru, is said to derive from the word 'zappa' that is used to describe the unnecessary parts of the fish, while 'jiru' or 'shiru' mean soup.
- source : en.hkg.jp/local

.......................................................................

Joomon no maguro nabe 縄文のまほろば鍋
Oma Maguro (Ooma Maguro 大間まぐろ Tuna from Oma town


kaisoo raamen 海草ラーメン seaweed noodle soup

.......................................................................



kaiyaki miso 貝焼き味噌 clams and scallops fried in miso
fried in a pan with beaten egg, dashi soup stock and miso paste. Sometimes fish is added.
It is very healthy and was served to sick people in former times, where eggs were considered medicine. Served in a scallop shell it is most decorative.
Well loved in Shimokita and Tsugaru.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

.......................................................................


kashiwa miso かしわみそ miso with chicken

.......................................................................



keiran けいらん lit: "chicken eggs" , a kind of mochi
Rice flour is made into a white dough, inside the round balls is azuki sweet bean paste. It comes as a soup, with a bit of soy sauce, flavored with konbu and shiitake mushrooms.
Usually served at celebrationsl


.......................................................................





ke no jiru, kenojiru けの汁 vegetable hodgepodge
From Tsugaru peninsula. Radish, carrots, goboo burdock, bracken, tofu and konnyaku are cut in small pieces and simmered in miso or soy sauce until a thick soup is done. Yakiboshi sardines are used to create a delicious dashi broth.
This dish is prepared in great quantity in a big pot and can be re-heated many days.
It was originally made by the housewife for the family to last while she was gone to visit her parents during the New Year period.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

.......................................................................


kenchin けんちん

kinoko no shiokara きのこのしおから


WASHOKU : Kiritanpo (kiritampo) きりたんぽ skewers of mashed rice
Also a speciality of Akita.
um einen Stock geformter Mochi-Teig wird gebraten und zu Eintopf gegessen


koae, ko-ae 子あえ

kodai no sushi 小鯛の寿司

kogori mame こごり豆


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


konnyaku 蒟蒻, musubi ito konnyaku むすび糸こんにゃく thread konnyaku bound together in a knot
to be eaten with hodgepodge, it is easier to grip with chopsticks.
It is all white in Aomori, because it is made from konnyaku flour.
There is a factory with a special maschine to bind these knots into the noodles.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


makaroni konnyaku マカロニ こんにゃく konnyaku in the form of italian macaroni
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Kuroishi town in Tsugaru

Kuroishi no yakisoba 黒石のやきそば fried noodles
Started after the war as a snack for children.With rather thick, flat noodles 太麺 and a sweet hot sauce. Fruit juice is used in the sauce.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


Kuroishi no tsuyu yakisoba 黒石のつゆやきそば
fried noodles in soup
Started in Showa 30, when hot soup was poored over the fried noodles.
Rather special and not eaten in other areas of Japan.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

other noodles from Tsugaru

Tsugaru chuuka zarusoba 津軽中華ざるそば
Tsugaru miso raamen 津軽みそラーメン
Tsugaru no shina soba 支那そば
. . . with soya sauce soup 醤油スープ

- quote
Yakisoba-no-Machi Kuroishikai
(Yakisoba City Kuroishi Association)

Yakisoba-no-Machi Kuroishikai is a community volunteer group committed to promoting Kuroishi Yakisoba and Kuroishi Tsuyu Yakisoba as regional brands (specialty dishes of Kuroishi) throughout Japan, and contributing to the revitalization and development of the region.

Kuroishi Tsuyu Yakisoba is served with Kuroishi Yakisoba (pan-fried noodles) sprinkled with tsuyu (Japanese broth) and topped with deep-fried tempura batter and scallions. The thick and flat noodles take on a unique, chewy texture, especially when mixed well with Worcester sauce. Only after eating Yakisoba, will you realize the uniqueness of these pan-fried noodles. Please try Kuroishi Tsuyu Yakisoba--we are certain you will find it pleasingly delicious.
- source : www.aomori-gourmet.jp


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


matagi meshi マタギ飯 bear hunter's rice and other dishes
see: mori no megumi


Minmaya maguro 三厩まぐろ tuna fish from Minmaya town, Tsugaru
It is one of the most expensive. Each is caught with a single line and then shipped in his own box (looks amost like a coffin), filled with ice.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



naga-imo no suitonjiru 長芋のすいとん汁




nebutazuke ねぶたづけ/ ねぶた漬け "Nebuta"-pickles
made from the benefits of the sea (fish roe, surume squid and kombu kelp) and the benefits of the mountains (radish, cucumbers). They can be heaped on a bowl of white rice to make a good meal (gohan no tomo).
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
NEBUTA are the famous floats for the festival, made from paper with huge illustrations.



Ooma no meguro ryoori 大間のまぐろ料理
Ooma (Oma) is the most famous port in the North.


oden, natsu oden 夏おでん oden hodgepodge eaten in summer
to keep warm after bathing.
It is eaten with shooga-miso, shoogamiso しょうがみそ/生姜みそ miso paste mixed with grated ginger.


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


Ōwani (大鰐町, Ōwani-machi)
popular for its many hot springs (Onsen).

Oowani onsen moyashi 大鰐温泉もやし bean sprouts from Owani
They are raised in hothouses with hot water pipes in the ground. The beans, kohachimame, are soaked in hot water and then grown for one week. The final sprouts are cleaned in hot water from the onsen ... They are very long and said to be healthier than normal moyashi.
This has been done since 300 years, when the local daimyo ordered the production to bring it to Edo as payment.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

saba 鯖 mackerel is a speciality of the port town of Hachinone.



sabappuru さばっぷる / サバップル apple pie with saba mackerel meat
Mackerel meat is shredded in very small pieces, fried with salt, spices, a lot of cinamon and yuzu juice, then put as an upper layer in the pie.
The baker has to be able to cut and prepare the fish as well as preparing the apple pie.
This is a newly created food from a girl of the local high school in Hachinohe town. It won the first prize in a competition for "creative food", because it combines the two specialities of Aomori, mackerels and apples. She also thought of the name and thus became quite a celebrity in town.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



sake no meshi sushi さけの飯寿し

sakura nabe 桜鍋 hodgepodge with horse meat

.................................................................................


same no atama サメの頭 head of a shark
It is boiled for about 15 minutes, then the eatable parts picked out, mixed with grated radish and miso to make
sukume サメすくめ a side dish, even served for the New Year.
Eaten in winter in the Tsugaru peninsula.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
To eat the head of a fish is considered auspicious. And in winter, the type
Aburatsuno-zame or Abura-zame あぶらつのざめ is found in great numbers in Tsugaru.


Bereits in den Überresten prähistorischer Siedlungen in Aomori aus der Jungsteinzeit (Jōmon-Zeit, ca. 5000–300 v. Chr.) fanden sich Knochen von Haifischen, insbesondere der Arten Dornhai (Aburatsunozame) und »Sternen-Haifisch« (Hoshizame).
Die kulturelle Bedeutung von Haifischfleisch für die Japaner belegt, dass seit jeher am großen Schrein von Ise, dem höchsten Shinto-Heiligtum, getrocknetes Haifischfleisch zu den Opfergaben für die Gottheiten gehört.
Es gibt mehr als 250 Haifischarten unterschiedlichster Größen in den Weltmeeren. In den japanischen Gewässern wurden bis zu 150 Arten gezählt. Die Rückenflossen und die Schwanzflosse der Blauhaie werden am häufigsten verarbeitet. Der Yoshikirizame-Blauhai wird bis zu vier Meter lang und wiegt bis zu 200 Kilogramm. Die männlichen Fische leben in südlichen Gewässern um Japan, die weiblichen ziehen nach Norden und kehren erst wieder zurück, wenn sie ausgewachsen sind.
In zoologischen Aquarien sind Haifische beliebte Ausstellungstiere. Kinder und Eltern können den scharfen Kiefern hier gefahrlos nahe kommen. Das große Aquarium im Sea Paradise auf der Insel Hakkeijima vor Yokohama hat sogar ein Grabmal für Haifische angelegt, das einmal jährlich von einem buddhistischen Priester besucht wird, der für die Seelen der im Aquarium verstorbenen Tiere betet.

.................................................................................


CLICK for more photos
sarada kanten サラダ寒天 jellied salad
with agaragar kanten. People in Aomori put a lot of food in a jellied mix with sugar and eat it as oyatsu for the afternoon break. Here it is a salad with cucumbers, carrots and other vegetables, lots of mayonnaise and then ... sugar and agar-agar kanten. Udon noodles are also prepared as "udon kanten" うどん寒天.
These kinds of preparations have started to become popular since 1975.


.................................................................................




senbeijiru せんべい汁 soup with Nanbu Nambu senbei 南部煎餅 waffles
in the southern Nambu area and Iwate

. Nanbu senbei, Nambu senbei 南部せんべい
from Morioka, former Nambu province .
  

Die berühmten Nambu-Waffeln kommen aus der Stadt Hachinohe, die in der heutigen Präfektur Aomori liegt, einst die Domäne Nambu. Früher dienten die Waffeln als haltbare Nahrungsmittel für die langen Wintermonate.
In den Supermärkten von Hachinohe finden sich endlose Regale mit über 40 Sembei-Sorten, allein zehn davon mit Sesam. Meistens werden sie in kleinen Familienbetrieben von Hand gebacken, sodass jede Sorte ihren einzigartigen Geschmack erhält.
Bei ganz einfachen Waffeln besteht der Teig lediglich aus Weizenmehl, Salz und Wasser. Die Sembei werden in Waffeleisen mit langen Griffen über glühenden Holzkohlen oder in einem elektrischen Heizgerät gebacken. Die Temperatur für Waffeln ohne Füllung sollte 130 °C betragen. Der Bäcker muss darauf achten, sie ständig zu wenden, damit sie nicht anbrennen. Mittlerweile wurden auch spezielle Maschinen zur Waffel-Herstellung entwickelt, die in Kleinbetrieben bis zu 3000 Waffeln täglich backen können. Die Bäcker allerdings müssen stets wachsam sein, da gleichzeitig Teig in die Formen gegossen und Waffeln aus den Formen herausgenommen werden mussen.

Zur Geschmacksverfeinerung wird häufig schwarzer Sesam mitgebacken, der den Waffeln einen unverwechselbar aromatischen Geschmack gibt. Einige Hersteller bestellen das unverzichtbare Salz für den Teig sogar aus den Hochebenen von Tibet, weil dieses Natursalz dank seines Mineralgehaltes dem Gebäck überraschenderweise eine gewisse natürliche Süße verleiht.
Für andere Sorten werden klein gehackte Erdnüsse mit etwas Zucker eingebacken. Andere Mischungen ergeben sich aus Äpfeln und Kürbissen, Süßkartoffeln und Shiso-Blättern. Auch verschiedene Getreidesorten werden beigemischt. Für einen herzhafteren Geschmack kommen Zwiebeln, Sojasauce, Chili, Tintenfisch oder Jakobsmuscheln mit in den Teig.

Der bei der Herstellung am Rand herausquellende Teig wird nicht entfernt, sondern mitgebacken, und in Körben gesammelt. Viele Kunden lieben diese von den Japanern »Ohren« genannten Reststücke als Zutat für die tägliche Suppe. Sie kommen daher auch in den Verkauf. Ebenfalls als Suppenzutat, und zwar für Eintöpfe im Winter Senbeijiru, werden weiße Sembei gebacken. Sie sind sehr hart und lösen sich im heißen Wasser nur langsam auf. Weitere Zutaten dieses Eintopfs sind Hühnerfleisch, Wintergemüse, Pilze – und alles, was der Familie schmeckt.

.................................................................................


shitogi mochi しとぎもち / しとぎ餅 fried or uncooked rice cakes
shidoge / shitogi 粢



First made as offerings for the deities, later eaten by the family.
During the 12th lunar month (now december) daily offerings of these mochi and a bit of sake are made.
Sometimes a bit of soy been an paste is used as filling and they are fried just a bit before eating.

. shitogimochi and クニチ,シトギマワシ Kunichi September 9 .
shitogi mawashi シトギマワシ


.................................................................................



Shirakami Man, Shirakami Manju 白神まん, 白神まんじゅう
sweet buns from the Shirakami Mountain area
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


shotsuru nabe しょっつる鍋, shottsuru nabe

sobakakke そばかっけ

sujiko すじこ (筋子) , sushiko すしこ red fish eggs
salted salmon roe
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


sutamina gen tare  スタミナ源タレ from KNK. sauce for grilled meat, put on other dishes like cold tofu, salad, white rice
with apples and garlic from Aomori


.......................................................................


taratama,tara-tama たらたま dried cod fish with a raw egg
The dried fish pieces (hoshidara 干し鱈) are dipped in a bowl with a raw egg mixed with soy sauce.
From Tsugaru.




.................................................................................


Tsugaruzuke 津軽漬け
made of kazunoko fish roe

Tsugaru soba, nama soba 生そば

.................................................................................

tsutsuke kakke つつけ(かっけ)

.................................................................................



uguijiru, ugui jiru ウグイ汁 ugui soup
ugui 鰔 Japanese dace

The fish is cut finely, bones and all, and mixed with miso, katsuobushi and eggs (almost like a hamburger) and then formed into small balls to be put in the soup.

.................................................................................

unimeshi うに飯 rice with sea urchins



:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

yakiboshi 焼き干し "grilled and dried" small sardines
for dashi broth, when they are cooked later.
They are made along Mutsu Bay at the Tsugaru peninsula. The head and entrails of small sardines are quickly taken off, the sardines washed in a bamboo basket until the scales are washed off and the back of the fish shimmers. Then they are "sewn" on a long bamboo stick, with the backbones all showing on the upper side, and grilled (broiled) over charcoal for about 8 minutes. Finally the grilled fish are dried in the sun and salty wind of Mutsu bay.
In winter the fish are not so fat and just right for this preparation.
CLICK for more photos
For grilling they are stuck in the pebbles around the fire with a tilt, so that the fat does not drip on the charcoal but rund down the fish and babmoo skewer.

They are the most expensive fish for dashi broth, one kilo costs more than 100 Euro.

CLICK here for PHOTOS !

yakiboshi raamen 焼き干しラーメン
noodle soup with special broth of yakiboshi sardines


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


External LINKS:

More are here:
Aomori 郷土料理ガイド

More are here:
- source : japantravel-guide.com


More are here:
Aomori : Various culinary specialties


*****************************
Worldwide use


*****************************
Things found on the way



*****************************
HAIKU


きりたんぽ焼くやどの子も憎からず   
kiritanpo yaku ya dono ko mo nikukarazu

roasting kiritanpo ...
no more hatred among
the children  
 

Nawadaya Roro (Rooroo) 縄田屋朗々


*****************************
Related words

***** WASHOKU : Regional Japanese Dishes


March 11, 2011
. Japan - after the BIG earthquake -   

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]

[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Akita

[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO TOP . ]

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Akita Prefecture

Akita Prefecture (秋田県, Akita-ken) is a prefecture of Japan located in the Tōhoku Region of northern Honshū, the main island of Japan. The capital is the city of Akita.
Separated from the principal Japanese centres of commerce, politics, and population by several hundred kilometres and the Ōu and Dewa mountain ranges to the east, Akita remained largely isolated from Japanese society until after the year 600. Akita was a region of hunter-gatherers and principally nomadic tribes.
Like much of the Tōhoku Region, Akita's economy remains dominated by traditional industries, such as agriculture, fishing, and forestry.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



. WASHOKU
The town of Uga and sketches of pretty girls advertisements
 
秋田県羽後町, Aoi Nishimata 西又葵
Akita Komachi あきたこまち (the belle of Akita) Rice Brand



. The Kanto Matsuri 竿燈 "pole lantern festival"  
beginning of August


::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


Regional Dishes from Akita 秋田の郷土料理

. . . CLICK here for Photos !



akebi no karakkozuke アケビの殻っこづけ akebia skin stuffed with meat and vegetables
akebi no nikuzume
CLICK here for photos
also eaten in Yamagata
akebi no tenpura from the skin of the plant.


asazuke あさづけ vinegared rice, a summer dish

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

damakko nabe だまっこ鍋
In Akita one of their most famous nabe is Damakko Nabe (だまっこ鍋).
The little balls in the pot are actually made from rice, they’re supposed to look like snowballs to give it a winter theme. The broth for the hot pot is made from soy sauce, chicken stock, and Japanese burdock and then a variety of vegetables and chicken are added. Damakko nabe is considered to be Akita’s soul food. Warm up around a Japanese hot pot in Akita.
- source : facebook -

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

hatahata ハタハタ

hatahata sushi ハタハタ寿し hatahata fish sushi
hatahata, Sandfisch, Arctoscopus japonicus
Its season is winter.
It is essential for the people to survive in the winter months.
Beliebt als Sushi oder mit Salz gegrillt (shioyaki) in Akita.
Er hat keine Schuppen und wenig kleine Gräten und die Wirbelsäule lässt sich leicht vom Fleisch ablösen. Wenn man den gegrillten Fisch fest am Schwanzende anfasst, lässt sich die Wirbelsäule einfach vom Kopfende her herausziehen.
Der weibliche Hatahata trägt die Eier, die als „Eiersack“-Snack beliebt sind (burikko ぶりっこ). The egg sack can be the size of a man's fist.
buriko ブリコ
. . . CLICK here for burikko Photos !

quote
Hata-hata is really sticky and strange-looking fish because it doesn’t have any scales. What the most famous about Hata-hata is its egg, Buriko. It is really big about to explode, and the taste is chewy and jelly like. It is cooked as Shotsuru nabe, Hata-hata pot, Hata-hata sushi, and broiled fish. Many old Akita people love it because of its history.

According to my parents, people in my grandparents and my parents generation ate Hata-hata almost every day in winter instead of sweets since fishermen had a big catch of Hata-hata, and it was really cheep like 500 yen per one box which contained about 50 Hata-hata. However, the number of Hata-hata decreased because of too mach catch, and Hata-hata costs 500 yen for 3 at present. Therefore, old Akita people miss Hata-hata in their memory, and want to eat it even if it costs high.

鰰、  魚雷
In Japanese, Hata-hata is expressed in Kanji as Fish plus God, or Fish plus Thunder. Since Hata-hata gather close to beach when it thunders, people might think Hata-hata is God of fish.
source : discover-jp.blogspot.com : kayanon


. . . CLICK here for Photos !
hatahata ハタハタ is the name of the fish, but its roe is called "roe from buri" (buriko). During the Edo period, the lord of Satake (former name for Akita) forbid to eat the roe of hatahata. So the fishermen caught it nevertheless and called it "roe from buri" (buriko).
Another story tells of the lord of Mito, Satake Yoshinobu 佐竹義宣, who was transferred to live in Akita. Since yellowtail (buri) was not served for the New Year food, he called the other roe BURIKO and enjoyed it as such as a nostalgic food.

buriko are the round sacks of eggs that float in the sea. The roe taken from the fish after cutting it up is much softer.
buriko is seldom eaten raw, because the egg membrane is very hard. It is put in vinegar and soysauce and sometimes fried just a little.
The semem sacks of the male are called shirako 白子.
It is a deep-sea fish that comes to shallow wates along some areas, where rivers flow into the sea and there is plenty of kelp to shelter the young fish. The buriko is said to be in various colors, according to what the fish eat most.

Grilled hatahata was one of the fish arranged on a tray as offering for the Namahage Demons during the New Year celebrations of the Oga peninsula.
Namahage Demons
Daruma Museum


The fish was caught in such numbers, that it was fermented in large barrels into a salty liquid called "shotsuru" or "shottsuru しょっつる【塩汁】
". This process laste for three years, until the fish was almost completely discomposed. This shotsuru liquid is used to flavor many dishes in Akita, best known is a hodgepodge with hatahata and this sauce, shotsuru nabe しょっつるなべ【塩汁鍋】 (kigo for winter).
. . . CLICK here for shottsuru Photos !
This is a kind of fish sauce, gyoshoo 魚醤(ぎょしょう).

shottsuru was also used to make a special sushi of cooked rice and pieces of hatahata.
This kind of sushi is very ancient, called "cooked rice sushi" (izushi, iizushi いずし)。
Izushi 飯寿司, Summer Food
hatahata sushi ハタハタ寿


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

hikiwari nattoo ひきわり納豆 fermented soy beans, hacked small
eaten with sugar
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



Hinaidori 比内鶏(ひないどり)/ Hinai jidori 比内地鶏 Chicken from Hinai, Odate. Kiritanpo with these chicken
WASHOKU : Kiritanpo (kiritampo) きりたんぽ skewers of mashed rice



iburi gakko, iburigakko いぶりがっこ smoked pickles with radish
smoked radish pickles
from Yokote town
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



imo no ko jiru, imonokojiru いもの子汁 with satoimo yam


Inaniwa udon 稲庭うどん noodles from Inaniwa town. With a long tradition.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
Reference

.......................................................................


ishiyaki ryoori 石焼料理 prepared with hot stones
from the Hunters of Oga Peninsula to keep warm. Stones from Oga are especially strong when thrown in water. Nowadays it is prepared in barrels of cedar wood

Ishiyaki – Kochen mit heißen Steinen

Es zischt und brodelt – plötzlich steigt Dampf auf. Geschickt lässt der Koch einen heißen Stein in den kleinen hölzernen Bottich gleiten. Im Nu wird alles gegart!

Beim nur in dieser Gegend typischen Ishiyaki werden Steine im Feuer erhitzt und dann in die Suppe gelegt, um sie zu erwärmen. Diese Zubereitungsart entdeckten die Fischer entlang der Halbinsel Oga, die oft den ganzen Tag auf dem Meer unterwegs waren. Mittags kam ein hölzerner Bottich mit frischen Fischen und Meeresfrüchten auf die Planken, die Würze brachte das salzige Meerwasser.

Auch am Strand wurde oft auf diese Art gekocht. Wenn sich dort kein Holzbottich fand, wurden die Fische einfach mit Wasser in eine Felsvertiefung gelegt und die Vulkansteine dazugegeben, die auf einem Feuer erhitzt worden waren. Das lokale Vulkangestein Ignimbrit oder Schmelztuff erwies sich in Japan als besonders geeignet, da dieses Gestein enorm temperaturfest ist.

Heute ist die Brühe meistens eine gesalzene Suppe, es wird aber auch Miso-Paste verwendet. Die Würze der Brühe basiert in jedem ­ Restaurant traditionell auf einem Familiengeheimnis. Im großen Bottich aus Zedernholz werden die tagesfrischen Fische und das Gemüse der Saison in mundgerechten Bissen in der Brühe angerichtet. Anschließend wird der Bottich auf den Tisch gestellt und die Zutaten werden mit heißen Steinen gekocht. Jeder kann sich nach Belieben aus dem Bottich bedienen. Dazu werden Reis und kleine Teller mit eingelegtem Gemüse und Häppchen gereicht.

.......................................................................


junsai nabe じゅんさい鍋 junsai vegetable hodgepodge


kasube no karagya ni かすべのからぎゃ煮
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
kasupei is dried manta fish. Boiled with soy sauce it is a dish for a celebration in the Akita region.
There is also a kasube matsuri festival

keiran けいらん

kiritanpo nabe きりたんぽ鍋 hodgepodge with kiritanpo
kiritanpo is also a speciality of Aomori.

koi no amani 鯉の甘煮

kujira くじらかやき whale meat soup
kujirajiru くじら汁
salted whale meat in miso soup


matsukawa mochi 松皮餅




orandayaki, oranda yaki オランダ焼き "Holland waffles"
a kind of Imagawa yaki waffle, but filled with ham and mayonaise.
The dough is sweetened with honey.

.......................................................................


shottsuru, shotsuru nabe しょっつる鍋
sauce from salted, fermented hatahata fish, when this fish was caught in large quantities.
. . . . . dadami nabe だだみ鍋

- quote
Shottsuru (しょっつる) is a type of fish sauce from Akita Prefecture, which is one of the 3 major fish sauces of Japan along with Ishiru from Ishikawa Prefecture and Ikanago-shoyu from Kagawa Prefecture.
Akita’s fish sauce is distinctive in its ingredients. It is made from Hatahata (sandfish) caught off the coast of Oga Peninsula.
Shottsuru (塩汁、塩魚汁) (lit. salt fish broth)
can be dated back to the early Edo period, and was traditionally made solely with the fish and salt. Now it has been produced in modern technique with additional ingredients, but there is a brewery who still produces it in the traditional method
Hatahata is a sandfish. Akita Prefecture has the largest catch of Sandfish in Japan. The fish has been an important protein sauce for Akita people in the old days, which was even sung in a famous folksong (“Akita-Ondo”). Today even designated as the prefectural fish!

How does Shottsuru taste like?


Despite how fishy it may sound, it is surprisingly mild and rich in flavor. Shottsuru is the main ingredient in Akita’s signature winter dish, Shottsuru-nabe, a hot pot with Hatahata and tofu and other ingredients. Also, in recent years, contemporary chefs are adopting some innovative ideas and recipes: the most popular style is the Italian style as in the picture !
- source : ohtazawako.blogspot.jp

.......................................................................


tamago mochi だまこもち
tamakko nabe だまっこ鍋


.......................................................................




Yokote yakisoba 横手やきそば fried noodles from Yokote
Thick wheat noodles with a fried egg on top, and fukujinzuke pickles.
It was served to children after WWII as a snack in the afternoon.


In 2009 the fourth B-1 Grand Prix was held in Yokote City in Akita Prefecture
A total of 26 dishes competed in the 2009 contest. The winner was a dish called Yokote yakisoba (fried noodles) from the host city itself. Yakisoba is eaten throughout Japan, but the Yokote variety is different in that it features noodles that are straight, thick, and boiled (rather than steamed), has cabbage and ground pork as its main other ingredients, is topped with a fried egg, and comes with sweet, crunchy pickles called fukujin-zuke on the side. The sauce used to flavor the noodles is a combination of Worcestershire sauce with a fish or other broth. Many established restaurants in Yokote have their own secret sauce recipes that have been handed down from generation to generation.

Yokote yakisoba was first produced in 1953, the creation of a local restaurant that specialized in okonomiyaki (thick, savory cabbage pancakes). Though originally designed to be a children's snack, the noodles caught on and soon came to be served as a regular main dish. Four restaurants were chosen as the Yokote yakisoba champions for 2009 in a competition in which the judges considered such criteria as how the noodles were fried and the balance between the noodles and sauce. Two of the four, Kuidoraku Yokote Ekimae Shiten and Idehaya, are conveniently located near Yokote Station.
- source : web-japan.org/trends

.......................................................................


yoochuu chokoreeto 幼虫チョコレート chocolate in the form of insect larvae
mostly like little beetle larvae from kabutomushi カブトムシの幼虫
They are covered with white sugar and the face is dark.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
from Yokote town


More
Akita 郷土料理 レシピー


*****************************
Things found on the way


Dämonen von der Halbinsel Oga 
»Whoooooohoho! War einer nicht brav? Weint etwa jemand? Hat die Schwiegertochter auch alle ihre Aufgaben im Haushalt ordentlich erledigt? Whoooooohoho!«

Mit großen hölzernen Messern und Wassereimern erscheinen gespenstisch aussehende Dämonenpaare am Neujahrstag, brüllend und wild umherspringend toben sie von Haus zu Haus. Manchmal dringen sie bis in die Wohnküche vor und erschrecken die Kinder.
Die Namahage-Dämonen sind mit riesigen Holzmasken und langen Strohmänteln kostümiert und kommen jedes Jahr zu Neujahr in die Häuser. Der Mann trägt eine rote, die Frau eine blaue Maske. Der Ursprung des Wortes Namahage erklärt auch gleich den Grund für das Erscheinen der Dämonen. Namahage stammt von namomi o hagu und bedeutet »kleine Brandwunden abkratzen«. Dabei handelt es sich um kleine Brandverletzungen an Händen und Beinen, die man sich schnell an der offenen Feuerstelle in der Küche zuziehen kann. Wer viele Brandstellen hat, zeigt damit, dass er im Winter faul am Herd gelegen hat. Die Namahage-Dämonen kommen mit ihren riesigen Messern ins Haus, um die faulen Kinder und Schwiegertöchter zu strafen, indem sie ihnen »die Brandstellen abkratzen«. Zur Besänftigung erhalten die Dämonen vom Hausherrn Reiswein und Mochi-Reiskuchen. Als Boten der Götter segnen die Namahage sowohl den Haushalt als auch alle Bewohner und versprechen Gesundheit, eine gute Ernte sowie gute Fischfangerträge im neuen Jahr.

Die Halbinsel Oga reicht wie eine spitze Zunge ins wilde Japanische Meer. Bezeichnenderweise heißt der höchste Berg in dieser Region »Berg des kalten Windes« (Kanpūsan). Neben dem Leuchtturm, der hoch oben auf diesem Berg in die Luft ragt, kann man mit Maiskorn-Softeis die Aussicht auf die Vulkanseen und das Gebiet Hachirōgata genießen. Hachirōgata war ursprünglich einer der größten Seen Japans, bevor er 1964 trockengelegt und in Ackerflächen umgewandelt wurde. Das Gelände liegt vier Meter unter dem Meeresspiegel und ist damit der tiefste Punkt Japans.

Am Ende der Halbinsel, dem Kap Nyūdō, befinden sich neben einem großen Parkplatz einige Souvenirläden. In den Hinterzimmern hocken die Namahage und trinken Tee. Sie warten nur darauf, dass der nächste Touristenbus eintrudelt. Dann laufen sie brüllend los und erfüllen vor den Läden ihre Pflicht als groteske, monströse Fotomodelle.

*****************************
HAIKU




*****************************
Related words

***** WASHOKU : Regional Japanese Dishes

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Gotochi Gurmet B kyu

[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO TOP . ]
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Gotochi Gurmet (gotoochi gurume)

gotoochi gurume ご当地グルメ
regional gourmet food

These efforts are part of the "town revival gourmet" machiokoshi gurume 町おこしグルメ.
People would travel and even make bus tours just to get some local food:
Gotochi Food, local specialities

kankoo gurume 観光グルメ, tourism gourmet.

gotoochi no zeppin ”ご当地の絶品” gotochi zeppin

CLICK for more photos

quote
Throughout Japan, there are local specialties deeply rooted in the respective regions called "Gotochi Food". Many people visit such regions to enjoy delicious dishes featuring local ingredients.

In many cases, the same kind of food may differ in taste and how it is eaten. A good example of such is Ramen. Depending on the region, the thickness and shape of the noodles as well as the color and flavor of the broth may be completely different.
Seasonings such as soy sauce and sauce do not taste the same everywhere you do because of the different preferences of flavor according to respective parts of the country. Moreover, some of the regions have their own unique seasonings.
Cattle, pigs, and chickens raised with utmost care are sold as expensive locally-bred brand meat.

There also are Sake that can only be savored in the respective regions and fruits that can be found no where else but in that certain area.
Meanwhile, some of the local specialties have rapidly become so popular ever since they were first introduced in the past dozen years or so that their names are recognized by the majority of the Japanese.
By tasting different local specialties, you will certainly be surprised at how many varieties there are. It would be a great idea to enjoy all the tastes each region has to offer.
source : www.japan-i.jp


WASHOKU
Regional Japanese Dishes



:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


Akkeshi gurume paaku 厚岸グルメパーク Gourmet Park Akkeshi
Hokkaido, in the south west of Hokkaido
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


Fujinomiya is gearing up with
yakisoba, even with a special song about it, yakisoba ondo 焼き蕎麦おんど (音頭)
More than 37 big and small shops care for the visitors from many places. This has helped the town to get more visitors and more life into its shopping streets.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

The characteristics of the noodles of "Fujinomiya Yakisoba"
http://www.umya-yakisoba.com/echaryki.htm



shigureyaki, shigure yaki しぐれやき, しぐれ焼 a kind of okonomiyaki with yakisoba,
with a fried egg on top to symbolize snow on Mount Fuji
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
shigure means "cold autumn rain, sleet".


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


CLICK for more photos
Map of Japan with regional dishes

gotoochi otsumami setto ご当地おつまみセット
sets of local specialities, mostly sold on the internet these days.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



Nagasaki has a Sasebo Burger. 佐世保バーガー
Sasebo baagaa
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



Nagoya no tebasaki age 名古屋 手羽先揚げ
deep-fried chicken wings from Nagoya
This was invented after the war, when a cook forgot to order whole chicken for his "Tarzan Fried Chicken". All that was left were the wings, which at that time were only used for making soup stock. He used the lot of wings, prepared it like his deep-fried chicken kara-age, with a special sauce, pepper, salt and sesame seed sprinkeld on top ... and started a hit in his small shop. He is now 80 years (in 2010) and the small restaurant still a favorite spot of many.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



Niimi Town, Okayama 新見市岡山県
inoshishi raamen いのししラーメン with wild boar meat
This soup is also served in North Kyoto 京北町.

. . . CLICK here for Photos !


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


Shizuoka Maguro Burger
Sakai Minato Maguro Burger (Tottori)
maguro baagaa まぐろバーガー tuna burger

. . . CLICK here for Photos !



:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


B-kyuu gurume ... Second Class Gourmet
B級グルメ bii kyuu gurume


. . . CLICK here for more Photos !




おかやまB級グルメフェスタin津山
B Kyu Gurume .. Festa in Tsuyama, March 20/21, 2010
Okayama prefecture





My Details are here:
. WASHOKU
Grade B Gourmet Meeting in Tsuyama




. Hiruzen Yakisoba 蒜山焼そば / ひるぜん焼そば
fried noodles from Hiruzen Highlands



quote
The B-class-food boom reveals true Japanese cuisine
By PHILIP BRASOR
Two weeks ago, an advisory panel to the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries recommended it apply to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization for recognition of Japanese cuisine kaiseki ryōri, as an intangible cultural asset.
snip
The panel might be better off taking a hint from the B-kyū (B-class) Gourmet movement, whose annual orgy of down-home gastronomy, the B1 Gold Grand Prix, was held last weekend in Himeji, Hyogo Prefecture. A record half-million people attended the festival to sample original concoctions from 63 localities and select the dish they liked best, which this year was Hiruzen yakisoba, stir-fry noodles with chicken and cabbage from the town of Miniwa in Okayama Prefecture. The winner won a golden trophy in the shape of a pair of chopsticks.

But what Maniwa mainly won is the kind of media exposure that amounts to billions of yen if translated into advertising terms. The Grand Prix was not only covered by all the major news shows, including NHK's, but many of the dishes that placed in the Top 10 were highlighted in depth; meaning film crews were dispatched to the places where these dishes originated in order to produce tokushū (special reports) about the food and the people who make it.



What's that worth? Fujinomiya, the town in Shizuoka Prefecture that has won the Grand Prix twice for its own style of yakisoba, claims that the dish has enriched the local economy to the tune of ¥44 billion since 2001. In the three months after Atsugi in Kanagawa Prefecture won the 2008 GP, the town reaped ¥3 billion from people who came to eat its prize-winning Shirokoro horumon (stewed guts). Kofu, the capital of Yamanashi Prefecture, saw the number of its visitors increase fourfold in the year since the city won the GP in 2010.

The B-kyū movement has been ascendant for years — the Grand Prix was launched in 2006 — and is being hailed as one of the few successful schemes for revitalizing rural and ex-urban areas, though "scheme" may not be the right word. B-kyū sprung up organically, without help from a coordinating entity. The various related trademarks are held by the committee that puts on the Grand Prix, but this organ simply filled a centralized public relations need that had grown large by the mid-2000s as more and more local governments endeavored to take advantage of the general public's interest in regional home cooking.

To anyone who watches Japanese TV at all, the B-kyū boom is hardly surprising. So many variety shows incorporate the preparation and eating of food that the Western genre known as "cooking shows" has no meaning here. More significantly, travel shows are often centered on seeking out exceptional dishes, and while regional cuisines have been around as long as there have been regions, Japanese TV has standardized the promotion of local foods with a production style built around the money shot of a celebrity taking that first mouthful, pondering its quality and then erupting in ecstatic praise over the amazing flavor.

Everybody knows the drill, which is why nobody is impressed any more. After decades of watching the same reaction repeated over and over, viewers invariably become jaded. They know travel shows are inexpensive to produce because small businesses offer free food and accommodations in exchange for exposure, and so the on-air talent has no choice but to effuse over everything they put in their mouths. It's not that the public doesn't believe the food is delicious; only that the producers' priorities have little to do with honesty.

B-kyū could partly be seen as backlash: viewers telling the media what's good rather than the other way around. The very name, "B-kyū," rejects the notion that people want something approved by someone whose authority on the matter is arbitrary and, by implication, snobbish. It's a movement that belongs to everyone. Now there are a number of programs that explore regional peculiarities on the locals' terms, most notably Nihon TV's "Kenmin Show." But they followed the trend, they didn't spark it.

It's this anti-elitism that people find gratifying and which may disqualify B-kyū for UNESCO's imprimatur for the same reason kaiseki would have been rejected. By definition, regional cooking, especially that which was designed to be cheap and resourceful (many B-kyū dishes started out as something to sell at local festivals), can only be representative of a small group. But that's what makes Japanese food great, if not exactly unique. Ingredients and cooking methods vary widely, but are less important than the enthusiasm of the consumer. As Japanese people are always quick to tell you, they'll eat anything as long as it tastes good.
source : Japan Times, November 2011


::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::


Digging in: the rise of B-kyū gurume


Everyman Eats is a new column about the phenomenon of B-kyuū gurume (B-grade gourmet) — inexpensive, down-home cooking that reflects local culinary traditions. This first installment considers 10 moments that helped shape the recent B-kyū boom.

Ramen hits the big screen (1985)
Director Juzo Itami's award-winning comedy "Tampopo" premiered during a national craze for Ogikubo Ramen ...

Noodle Mecca Kanagawa (1994)
When the Shinyokohama Ramen Museum opened in 1994, ...
Tokyo's Gyoza Stadium (2002) and Yokohama's Cup Noodles Museum (2011).

Takeru Kobayashi conquers (2001)
the 2001 Nathan's Annual Hot Dog Eating Contest

Ladies welcome at Kohmen (2002)
in a yakiniku (barbecue) restaurant ...

Kimukatsu slices the field (2003)
the cutlets at Kanto-based tonkatsu chain Kimukatsu. ...

B-1 Grand Prix pulls a crowd (2006)
B-kyū gurume's rise from local fad to national obsession
from Hokkaido fried noodles to Okayama tripe udon —

Ishi-chan makes it B-I-G (2007)

Every populist movement needs a mascot, and B-kyū gurume found its own in plus-size comedian Hidehiko Ishizuka. Clad in bovine-print overalls and armed with a bulletproof gullet, the portly "gourmet reporter" has made a career of touring down-home restaurants on such shows as TV Tokyo's "Ganso! Debuya" ("Original! Big Eaters"). His euphoric cry of pleasure — "Maiu!" — has become a national catchphrase.
("Maiu!" - U MAI it tasts sooo good!)

Ippudo takes Manhattan (2008)
in New York's trendy East Village. ...

Noodles gets co-opted
(2010)
Udon restaurant Mendokoro Nakajima, which opened in 2010 in the Hotel New Otani Tokyo,

B-kyū gurume goes mobile (2012)
Bookstores ... guides to B-kyū gurume, ...
Gotochi B-kyū Gurume Keitei app ...

source : Japan Times, June 29, 2012


. SnapDish app for food photos .


*****************************
Worldwide use


*****************************
Things found on the way


jisan jishoo 自産自消 self-produced, self-consumed



Locally produced food and fish is prepared, for example in school luncheons or official buildings.
Many regions are trying to install new green values in the consumers.
This is a new word, maybe since 2008.

. . . CLICK here for Photos !

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

http://gourmet.oricon.co.jp/special/20070515_01.html


*****************************
HAIKU




*****************************
Related words

***** WASHOKU : Regional Japanese Dishes

***** WASHOKU
bii kyuu gurume B級グルメ B-class gourmet food



*****. スローフードジャパン Slow Food Japan


:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::