Delicious Japanese Food
Transcription
Delicious Japanese Food
FREE 05・06 2014 MAY&JUNE vol. 21 New Opening KAIJU SAKABA QUALITY REVIEW Hita City, Oita Prefecture Yumehibiki, a Premium Plum Wine From Oyama-machi, Where Plums are Prized NEW A DREAM IN PROGRESS Emeritus Professor, The Jikei University School of Medicine Former Director, The Jikei University Hospital Hiroshi Moriyama AirEngine by Balmuda: An Air Cleaning Device that Even Removes PM2.5 [FEATURE] Savoring Seasonal Bounty and the Historical Flavor of Dashi Stock Delicious Japanese Food The Difficulty of Preserving a Taste Unchanged in 300 Years Kyoto/ Imobo Hiranoya Honke A Pride That Comes From Serving Only the Finest Tokyo/Seika Kobayashi Seasonal Sensibilities in Every Single Dish Tokyo/ Camellia Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo eng.jqrmag.com May&June 2014 (published on April 7, 2014) C OV E R Photography/Yosuke Suga C O N T E N T S 05 New Opening KAIJU SAKABA 06【FEATURE】 Savoring Seasonal Bounty and the Historical Flavor of Dashi Stock Delicious Japanese Food ● The Difficulty of Preserving a Taste Unchanged in 300 Years Kyoto/ Imobo Hiranoya Honke ● A Pride That Comes From Serving Only the Finest Tokyo/Seika Kobayashi ● Seasonal Sensibilities in Every Single Dish Tokyo/ Camellia Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo 24 QUALITY REVIEW Hita City, Oita Prefecture Yumehibiki, a Premium Plum Wine From Oyama-machi, Where Plums are Prized AirEngine by Balmuda: An Air Cleaning Device that Even Removes PM2.5 28 NEW A DREAM IN PROGRESS Article 1 in a Series My Grandmother s Example Hiroshi Moriyama Emeritus Professor, The Jikei University School of Medicine Former Director, The Jikei University Hospital Publisher and Editor-in-Chief Jun Shinozuka Editors Jun Nakaki Lyu nari JQR editorial department 2-1-14 Sarugakucho, Chiyoda-ku Tokyo 101-0064 03-3518-2270 Siori Ito Masahito Kato JQR advertising department Designer Wakako Kawasaki Web Motoki Nakae Translation Manabiya Inc. 2-1-14 Sarugakucho, Chiyoda-ku Tokyo 101-0064 03-3518-4488 g n i n e p O w e N Alien Baltan is the Manager! Alien Baltan won t show up while the pub is open to Earthlings, but the place is still a wonderland! Pub where Ultra monsters and aliens regularly gather to blow off steam now open to humans! Photos/Tomoya Takai Text/JQR The fun menu features foods every monster will love, inc luding the Alien Baltan Special, Go for the Color Time r!, and Destroy the Japanese Branch of the Science Sp ecial Search Party! Beer mugs are decorated with one of five Ultraman characters, and while the Kaiju chopst ick rests on the tables aren t for sale, every guest is allow ed to take one home. The pub also sells limited-edition Kaij u Sakaba merchandise and DVDs, books and other product s from the Ultraman series. Note that the pub refuses servi ce to members of the Terrestrial Defense Force and anyon e who can change into a superhero. ©TSUBURAYA PRODUCTIONS appeared in Episode Two of the original break, too. It s scheduled to be open to Sakaba, a secret pub where all mighty Ultraman series. He supposedly first came humans for only a year, but if enough aliens and monsters can relax and debate, to Earth after losing his home to a nuclear people are having a good time interacting available to the people of planet M240, explosion, but now here he is, manager of with all the monsters and aliens, Alien this place you call Earth. the Kaiju Sakaba and looking very Baltan might consider keeping it open This announcement came from none other pleased with life on our planet. longer. than Alien Baltan, the space ninja who first The pub is, of course, designed for We have decided to make the Kaiju monsters. Lighting is kept low, and the place is decorated with figures of all the old familiar creatures like Kanegon and Red King. It s easy to imagine their ferocious yet somehow lovable antics and famous fight scenes. Apparently they like to visit the pub to let off some steam after being beaten by Special secret rooms open only to guests celebrating a birthday. Ultraman, which should make this a perfect DATA KAIJU SAKABA NOF Kawasaki Higashi-guchi Bldg. B 1 st Floor 3 - 1 Ekimae-honcho, Kawasaki-ku, Kawasaki-shi, Kanagawa TEL:044-210-5565 URL:http://www.kaiju-sakaba.com Holidays:Open all year Hours: 4:30 p.m. ‒ 12 a.m. (Last order for food: 11 p.m.; last order for drinks: 11:30 p.m.) (Open only until March, 2015) place for work-weary Earthlings to take a 2014 May& June 05 Kyoto Imobo Hiranoya Honke The restaurant burned to the ground, but th is box, containing an ink sketch of Kumezō Kitamura, the 11th generation ancestor wh o revived the family fortunes, was rescued from the fire (calligraphy by Kaishu Matsu mura and Isao Kurata). The box has scorc h marks on the outside, and the sketch itse lf has water stains. Savoring Seasonal Bounty and the Historical Flavor of Dashi Stock Delicious Japanese Food A Japanese dish, made with painstaking effort from carefully selected ingredients. The source of its flavor is dashi stock, an ingredient with a long history, artfully combined with a bountiful range of seasonal ingredients through the skill and passion of the cook. Photography / Yosuke Suga Text/ Shiori Ito JQR Editorial staff Tokyo Seika Kobayashi 06 2014 May&June A reservations-only restaurant that accepts only t wo bookings a day. The menu consists solely of the owner-chef s car efully thought out courses of Japanese dishes. Thi s bowl of seasonal ingredients in a broth of dashi stock is balm for the soul. 07 Delicious Japanese Food A restaurant offering traditional Kyoto cuisine in a corner of Maruyama Park has been in the same family for fourteen generations The Difficulty of Preserving a Taste Unchanged in 300 Years Imobo Hiranoya Honke, Kyoto Founder Gondayu Hirano worked for the imperial court from the Genroku (1688-1704) to Kyoho (1716-1736) eras. The skills and taste that he perfected in his restaurant, Imobo, have been handed down through the family by word of mouth ever since. We asked the current 14th generation proprietress, Akemi Kitamura, about these secrets. his service and start up a restaurant. While it was undoubtedly a heavy This is how the restaurant began. responsibility to continue such a long In Kyoto the consummate pairing of two tradition, More than anything else I just ingredients is described as a unique like the work, Ms. Kitamura said with a You will find Imobo Hiranoya Honke in encounter. This means that combining smile. a corner of Maruyama Park, on the way the two makes each even more This traditional taste is passed down from Yasaka Shrine heading to the delicious, a multiplication of flavor completely by word of mouth. There is Chion-in temple complex. The name rather than an addition. In earlier times nothing written in the way of a recipe or Imobo comes from a dish made of yam when the transport network was not as notes; instead, it is about looking with (ebi-imo) simmered with dried cod developed, having two ingredients that the eyes, remembering with the body (bodara). There is a reason why this would never normally come into and experiencing with the tongue. The dish has long been a favorite in Kyoto. proximity of each other meet in the important thing in maintaining the same During the early eighteenth century, in same pot and bring out greater things flavor is to assess the weather and the middle of the Edo period, Imobo from each other was indeed a unique quality of ingredients on any given day. founder Gondayu Hirano was working in encounter of the highest order. The That s not something you can write the service of the imperial court. When similarity of this process to a man and down. To maintain exactly the same a younger brother of the Emperor visited woman from different backgrounds flavor in Kyoto, with its extreme Kyushu, he brought with him sweet cooperating in marriage led to the dish seasonal weather changes, requires potatos, which Gondayu Hirano began coming to symbolize the wish for family great mastery of the senses. Ms. to cultivate in the Maruyama Gion area, happiness, becoming a traditional Kyoto Kitamura s son has learned this art, managing to grow high-quality produce. dish, essential to any celebratory ensuring that the tradition will continue These came to be called ebi-imo due to occasion, such as the New Year or a on to the fifteenth generation. the shape and vertical stripe pattern on wedding. Many figures in the literary world have The History of Imobo the surface, which resembled prawns (ebi). Dried cod (bodara) was transported from countries to the north by sea, and was a precious source of 08 Continuing the Tradition loved this flavor. For example, novelist Eiji Yoshikawa famously wrote: A taste that has been handed down for a hundred years, tastes of one hundred protein in the city of Kyoto, and was How does the same taste get handed years. Nobel prizewinner Yasunari presented as an offering to the imperial down unchanged for over three hundred Kawabata is also said to have stopped court. Thus, according to legend, did years? by for some imobo after celebrating yams from a southern country meet up The current proprietress, Ms. Kitamura, receiving his prize. A frequent visitor to with fish from a northern country in finishes her housework every morning the restaurant, Kawabata once wrote a Kyoto, resulting, after much trial and before changing into a kimono and piece of calligraphy stating Eat error, in the creation of the dish imobo. setting out for the restaurant. Ms. delicious food and live long . The The reputation of imobo grew and Kitamura is the younger of two sisters, restaurant is also the setting for one of Gondayu Hirano, wanting to spread this but had always vaguely assumed since crime novelist Seicho Matsumoto s dish throughout Kyoto, received childhood that she would take over the books. permission from the Emperor to leave restaurant. 2014 May 09 Good Food and Long Life Experience the Mystery of Life-Extending Japanese Cooking The dried cod used at Imobo Hiranoya Honke is Pacific cod, preserved by drying in the shade. In the past it was presented to the Imperial Court. The yams were originally brought from Kyushu in the days when they were a rarity, before there were widespread distribution networks. They were cultivated and came to be called ebi-imo (prawn yams) due to their shape and patterning. Imobo is made by cooking the yams and dried cod in a big pan. 10 Recreating a Three-Hundred Year Old Flavor hard ones do not cook properly in the care every day for three hundred years, center. The secret to imobo, however, and is not something that a person is that the ingredients don t fall apart could learn to make in a short time. The even when cooked together. The long investment of time produces a restaurant uses a special large pan for flavor that cannot easily be recreated. The seasoning in imobo is very simple. cooking. The cooking takes time, with Katsuobushi (dried bonito shavings), the heat regulated as necessary and konbu (kelp), sugar and soy sauce. bitter scum carefully removed. It is said That s all it is. that the bitter juice that comes out of Ms. Kitamura reveals the process. We the ebi-imo softens the dried cod, and Customers of all ages and types flock rehydrate the dried cod by soaking it in elements secreted from the dried cod to Imobo Hiranoya Honke, from families iced water for a week, until it s soft. prevent the ebi-imo from falling apart. with children to couples out on a date, Then it s put in a pot with the ebi-imo, There are other secrets besides the but many first-time male customers which has had the skin peeled off in pan. The cooking broth itself is handed seem a little bewildered. Men tend to thick slices. We put in dashi stock down and added to. A tiny part of the think of yams as something for women made from konbu and katsuobushi, and flavor in this broth may be from the Edo or children, and when they see our food simmer over a very low heat for three to period itself, says Ms. Kitamura. That for the first time, they say What, yams? four hours. Then we add the sugar and is how the taste of a three hundred year with disappointment. But once they soy sauce in two or three lots. We don t old flavor deepens, creating a flavor that take a bite, they realize it goes with use any special brands, just the does indeed, as Yasunari Kawabata sake and fills the stomach, so that by ordinary ones that have always been wrote, have longevity. the time they leave they are satisfied, around. Next we remove it from the The cooked yams are soft, and can says Ms. Kitamura, describing how it heat and leave it to stand overnight so easily be broken into pieces with happens. Male customers who have the flavor can penetrate, then next day chopsticks. Bite into one and you can been to the restaurant before might bring it to the boil again, adjust the tell that the flavor has penetrated agree with her. flavoring and it s done. evenly. The dried cod also has a Usually ingredients of different hardness pleasing softness. The first bite tastes wouldn t be cooked together, since if sweet, but is so perfectly balanced it they aren t cooked separately the softer leaves no aftertaste. This flavor has ingredients tend to fall apart, and the been painstakingly recreated with loving 2014 May&June A Flavor Loved by Everyone This beguiling dish of yam and dri ed cod does not fall apart even aft er two days of slow cooking. The aroma tempts the taste buds to pa rtake of its life giving energy. 11 I M O B O U The charming red lanterns that han g from the ceiling are popular with f emale patrons. Seating is available on chairs or tatami mats, in semipartitioned rooms or facing the gard en. The 200 year old oriental elm insid e the restaurant. The wall is cut ou t to accommodate the tree as it co ntinues to grow. It s a robust tree t hat seems to be part of the buildin g, doing its own part to preserve tr adition. question regarding what hospitality lantern stands next to the entrance, and hospitality as always. As the times for the memory of your ancestors. means. Too much hospitality can have in the courtyard flowers bloom as the speed up, knowing the good things Everybody has ancestors. I m not doing the unintended effect of making seasons change and wild birds about Kyoto, its history and culture, anything particularly special. Everything someone uncomfortable. A restaurant sometimes pause to rest, and red gives people a more relaxed sense of Deciding to carry on the tradition as the is so convenient now, but in the past that you can visit spontaneously without lanterns hang over the seats facing the time, and the days seem to pass a little Imobo Hiraboya Honke , and ever since fourteenth generation proprietor required traveling to Kyushu could mean putting any special preparation is one where garden, overlooking the beautiful more calmly. Regardless of the times, I I was small I always watched my a certain amount of resolution. The life your life at stake. It was a truly great you can feel totally relaxed and able to scenery of Maruyama Park. am happy if I can just keep something mother doing this work and thought that of the man who became Ms. Kitamura s thing, I think, for my ancestor to find enjoy the food without haste. The There is other seating in tatami mat important alive and pass it on to I wanted to do it too. I really enjoy husband would also be affected by that these delicious yams in a place he literary figures who used to visit the rooms. A two hundred year-old oriental everyone. meeting customers, so I was probably decision. I am so grateful to my would never see again, and bring them restaurant undoubtedly kept coming elm inside the restaurant continues It is comforting to know that Ms. suited to the service industry But it husband. He was a salaryman, so back because he wanted to give back because they appreciated that growing even now, towering over the Kitamura will be there in the future, was not that Ms. Kitamura was not maybe he said he d do it because he everyone the experience of eating them. kind of relaxed hospitality. wall that is cut out to accommodate its waiting to welcome customers and interested in any other vocations. didn t know how hard it could be When I think about that I can t help but growth. keeping the tradition alive. Apparently there was a time during her running a restaurant. I was very happy feel appreciative. student years when she wanted to be a that we also had the support of my That sense of appreciation is surely pilot. Having said she was suited to husband s family, she reflects what informs Ms. Kitamura s approach, customer service, you might think a nostalgically. Once the children were and everything she does in her work. cabin attendant would be a more likely bigger I was able to go to the restaurant choice. But Isn t being a pilot a lot everyday, and life became very busy. I more interesting? Ms. Kitamura said m sure there were moments when we with sparkling eyes, I like having felt the stress. But when you re busy adventures. Life as the Proprietress of Imobo I was born the second daughter of 12 2014 May&June Resolving to Carry on the Tradition Carrying on a tradition means caring Maruyama Park Location Visitors from overseas flock to Kyoto for its unique atmosphere and scenery. In the past tourists were unused to foods Imobo Hiranoya Honke is located inside such as nori and grated Japanese yam, Maruyama Park, to the east of the Gion but now many use the Internet to gather district and Yasaka Shrine, a park information on Japanese culture and well-known for its weeping cherry enjoy with a greater understanding. I don t believe there s anything special blossom trees. Cross a bridge over a Being granted world heritage status is a you forget those moments. There s no about my hospitality. Don t do anything small stream to reach the restaurant, good opportunity to spread the word time for stress to build up, she says to someone that you wouldn t like done built in the style of a tea ceremony about Japanese food. However, that with a laugh. If you love the work you to yourself, to begin with. Do whatever house. It s a familiar part of the park doesn t mean doing something new. I do, it s possible to pour everything into would make you happy. That s all it is. scenery. try to make the traditional taste, it. Thus was Ms. Kitamura s answer to a An old-fashioned Kasuga-style stone unchanged, and offer the same Hospitality DATA Maruyama Park, Gion, Higashiyama-ku, Kyot o, 605-0071 (North of Yasaka Shrine) TEL 075-525-0026/075-525-0004 11:00-20:30 (last orders: 20:00) Open every day 2014 May& June 13 Delicious Japanese Food The End Result of a Fixation on Flavor A Pride That Comes From Serving Only the Finest Tokyo/Seika Kobayashi Seika Kobayashi is a Japanese restaurant accommodating just eight guests. The owner-chef works alone, his mind never at rest as he works to come up with the finest dishes. The fourth floor restaurant consists solely of a counter and a table, ea ch seating four. The serving dishes on the shelves include many one-of-a-kind pieces by ceramicists carefully chosen by the owner-chef. His goal was to survive solely on his skills as a chef I couldn t help worrying that if I didn t what Yuji Kobayashi hoped as he have something special, I d end up the entered culinary school after high loser. him of his nerve. But Kobayashi His turning point came out of the blue. and thought Wow, that s beautiful. I persisted, buying one plate at a time. One day, a regular customer who d That s the first time I saw something want it. With the hope of one day having his heard Kobayashi chatting about his Still a teenager, Kobayashi agonized Falling in love with a plate was one own place where he could serve the dreams for the future told him about a him to pursue Japanese cuisine. The through the long days, until one day he thing, but going to an exhibition of a dishes he d prepared on the Seika Suda place he might be able to afford. Just I m reminded of an old popular song days and weeks that followed were a happened upon a Kutani ware plate. famous potter s works and buying a plates he d acquired, he continued his 33 square meters, it featured an open that went The chef is a lone wolf. All monotonous round of nose-to-the- Created by Seika Suda, a fourth- one-of-a-kind piece was no simple apprenticeship at Kitcho, an old and kitchen with a counter that seated just he can rely on is the skills he s cutting-board practice and study. generation ceramicist, it had all the matter for a young man of only 20. It respected Japanese restaurant. four people, and when he lined up his hallmarks of the Kutani tradition, but wasn t just a matter of saving up his practiced and perfected. It emphasizes 14 skills need never go hungry. That s school, where his dexterous hands led My friends at school were also my how tough the chef s life can be, but rivals, all of us hoping to become chefs. was exquisitely decorated in a modern meager earnings̶the rarified also the idea that a chef with strong In the midst of this friendly competition, style. atmosphere at the exhibits also robbed 2014 May&June An Encounter with an Intimate Space collection of serving dishes they seemed to fit right in the intimate space. The location and other 2014 May& June 15 Gorgeous color delights the eye, while carefully-selected ingredients delight the tongue. Clear soup is garnished with yuzu, bringing th e aroma of the broth to the back of the nose as the steam wafts from the bowl. Generously-portioned steamed abalone is plump and tender, accented with the delectable f ragrance of fresh green horseradish. conditions were ideal, and Kobayashi over long years of working with diverse decided this was where he d plant the ingredients and applying creativity and flag of his new restaurant, Seika skill to bringing out their flavors. That Kobayashi. The Seika, of course, he history also nurtured the Japanese took from the name of the potter who d sense of taste. been his inspiration all along. He also decided he d take reservations often expresses multiple flavors as a for just two parties a night̶eight single taste̶ sweet/spicy, or sweet/ people being the most he could handle sour. And although the human body is doing everything himself. designed to reject bitter flavors as I thought that by working in front of the foods can sometimes taste good. The meals, their expressions as they ate, I d ability to recreate these flavors on the be better able to serve food I could be plate gives Japanese cuisine its depth, satisfied with. That s just an excuse, of which is what makes it so rewarding to course̶in such a small place, I didn t prepare. have any choice. As a chef, Kobayashi takes pride in In any case, that s what he thought at preparing food that brings out these the time. delicate, varied flavors for diners to enjoy, and in seeing his customers enjoy them. As a result, he pays great attention to his ingredients, starting with their aroma, color, and luster, Japanese cuisine gets its richness and checking their resilience, how his knife variety from the seasons, from the goes through them, considering what opportunity to enjoy products of the cut surfaces to present. How, in other mountains and the sea when they are words, each ingredient can best be at their best. The techniques found in used. Japanese cooking were established The appeal of Japanese cuisine goes 2014 May&June Katsuramuki is the most fundamental skill for an y kind of Japanese knife work. The chef focuses on using the pad of his thumb to ensure he mai ntains a uniformly thin cut. possibly poisonous, even bitter or acrid customers, seeing how they paced their The Depth Makes for Rewarding Work 16 For example, the Japanese language Thinly-peeled carrot and radish are finely sliced, tied together, and placed in the bowl. The comb ination of red and white adds both color and fla vor. Only a single tasting menu, changed every six weeks, is offered. The dishes used in this trio of appetizers are b oth beautiful to look at, and enhance the appearance of the food. 17 S E I K A K O B A Y A S H I Handpicked fish is carefully prepared, skewered, and charcoal-roasted. The crackling sound is accompanied by the smell of the charcoal and the fragrant aroma of the skin. Kobayashi gained his first Micheli n star just 18 months after openin g in 2009. The restaurant is like a hideaway, located on a quiet resi dential street. The Dangers of Convenience particularly good. The flavors all just life as a chef is that there aren t a lot of once every few years, I remember them play it safe, food to satisfy anyone and really delicious foods out there. Today, once they visit again and enjoy a meal everyone. he s made his restaurant a place for here. soup stock. Dashi provides the so- That tastes should change with the Flavors are not only increasingly pursuing the finest flavors. Because he Opening the restaurant was an anxious texture on the tongue, the rush of flavor called umami component, and is times is only natural, but Kobayashi indistinguishable, preservatives are works with a broker at the Tsukiji fish time. With no money to advertise, as one chews. The sound of skin typically made from kelp and dried senses a risk in our reliance on the used to give the foods a longer shelf market who he truly trusts, his menus Kobayashi had to rely on word of mouth crackling from a just-roasted piece of bonito. Even preparing these individual all-too convenient tastes offered by the life. Kobayashi fears that eating such are generally composed around fish. from the guests that did show up. On fish, even the sound of ingredients ingredients involves the efforts of a typical convenience store. foods from an early age will lead to a rubbing together in a bowl̶all of these great many people. comprise our enjoyment of food. For example, the dried bonito starts convenience stores. My mother s with bonito caught at sea by fishermen. cooking was the only thing I knew. But The fish is brought to land, cleaned and beyond flavor, and encompasses the chance to take the stage. enjoyment of sight, smell, and texture. One of these forms the foundation of The anticipation as one reaches for a flavor in Japanese cuisine̶dashi, or morsel with one s chopsticks. The There are also ways to combine the colors of the ingredients with the right serving dishes to stimulate the sight and make food seem even more appetizing. Even the tiniest garnish of carved yuzu bushi in katsuo-bushi, the Japanese name for dried bonito) and boiled. Once boiled, the bushi is then hung outside But 18 months from opening, he what I use, I get the best fish possible, received his first Michelin star, and that quick and convenient is better, that and that improves my cooking. since then, reservations have been hard mothers aren t professional chefs, and cheap goods are better than expensive The dishes he comes up with leave to come by. His obsession with flavor sometimes they mess up. This gives us ones, that it s okay for things to be just diners groaning with pleasure. The food seems to have inspired his guests, and a chance to really experience what bad okay and not anything special, become comes out looking beautiful, the today, there s no doubt the word is flavors taste like. the new normal. portions are generous, and the distinct spreading. Seika Kobayashi is a At 38, Kobayashi is among the last flavors of the ingredients enrich and restaurant that takes pride in making delight with the first bite. sure every dish is delectable. To know what tastes delicious, it s also decreased sense of taste. I don t think we should let this sense to dry before going into a smoker. Each important to know what doesn t. This generation to have grown up without presentation of Japanese cuisine. step in the process is handled by a teaches us that food comes in all kinds convenience stores, and says he different specialist. The finished, dried of flavors, and helps expand our sense wishes that the younger generation senses, opening up the mind and body. bonito is then stored in a warehouse of taste. would have a greater awareness of the Customers find even their conversations importance of food. This, he says, is are deeper. Since I started working here where it matures. All of this work goes If I asked my mother to make me a Eating good food stimulates all five into just one ingredient used in making lunch, she would always take the time why he hopes to continue leaving a alone, I ve closed the distance between the broth. to prepare rice balls. Today, a wide legacy that honors the wonders of myself and my customers. Starting a Today, the word umami has found its variety of prepackaged lunches is Japanese cuisine. conversation with the seasons, talking every day. Japanese cuisine features a way into use even overseas, further readily available. Kids today even show surprisingly wide range of ingredients, proof that the rich flavors of Japanese up for field trips or athletic meets with from the stars of the show to the bit cooking are appreciated by people the store-bought lunches. The problem is, players. Many of them play an important world over. none of the foods sold at convenience I get all kinds of ingredients delivered role even though they seldom get a 2014 May&June top of that, his prices are fairly high. best ingredients better than me select When I was a child, we didn t have peel is indispensable to the Dashi is at the Heart of Japanese Cuisine 18 formed into the classic boat shape (the By letting someone who can spot the stores tastes bad; neither is any of it In Pursuit of the Ultimate Dish One thing Kobayashi has learned in his about places where their favorite foods are produced or memories they associate with them, I ve learned to understand each individual s upbringing and lifestyle. Even if I see them only DATA Seika Kobayashi At the owner-chef s request, address and phone n umber have not been provided. 2014 May 19 C A M E L L I A Embracing the scent of spring as cherry trees bloom: mousse of John Dory in vernal pastels Delicious Japanese Food Haute cuisine based on the philosophy of Auguste Escoffier Seasonal Sensibilities in Every Single Dish Daniel Paquet Head Chef Camellia Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo Head Chef at Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo's Camellia restaurant since 2011, Daniel Paquet creates flavors unique to Camellia for diners to savor as they enjoy the seasonal charms of the hotel's Japanese garden. We talked to Paquet, a four-decade resident of Japan, about combining French cuisine with Japanese-style flair. 20 2014 May&June 21 A palate expanded by Japanese cooking offers inspiration for a new take on French cuisine Spr ing at t he Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo brings a blaze of color with the bloom ing of 120 trees of around 20 varieties, starting wi t h Kawaz u and Taiwan cherries, continuing through S om ei Y oshino cherries and finishing with weeping double-flow ered varie t i es . Over t his six-week period the view of the garden from C am ellia is sim ply m agnificent. A dream becomes forty years in Japan half a millennium or more. Paquet was At Camellia, the set menus are renewed particularly taken with the cherry trees about seven times a year: quite a rapid and fireflies. What Paquet specializes in pace. When developing new menus, Born in France's Bresse region, is French haute cuisine, but he found Paquet's main priorities are to use Daniel Paquet trained in French cuisine that working amid such verdant seasonal ingredients, giving diners a and embarked on a career that by 1972 surroundings honed his sensibilities, sense of each season. Paquet has saw him in the roles of chef saucier and he began to wonder if he could always proactively included ingredients and sous chef at Maxim's in Paris. incorporate this distinctively Japanese he has only become familiar with since While in Paris he met and married a sort of refinement in his cooking. coming to Japan. The Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo also hosts many events steeped Japanese woman, and in 1976 came to Japan to take up the post of executive Cherry blossom turns the garden pale in Japanese tradition. Paquet studies chef at Maxim's de Paris in Ginza, pink, dazzling against blue skies, these occasions and familiarizes Tokyo. soothing the souls of all who survey the himself with the relevant traditions, then scene. Unlike the Japanese, who tend does his utmost to please guests to view cherry trees in terms of the coming to the hotel for each event. evanescence of scattering petals, Such thoughtfulness is the true essence For Paquet, who says he thought that Paquet was seduced by the sheer of hospitality. all Japanese wore kimonos, and vitality of their vibrant blooming in the The month and a half devoted to a samurai could still be seen around, the here and now. The challenge was how menu passes in a flash, and soon it is Ginza streets came as quite a shock. to express such a sentiment in his time to create the next one. While cooking. A sensation he had never coming up with new menus means reflects. Japan was really modern. I experienced in France began to take wracking his brains each time, Paquet never imagined there would be high-rise hold. Carefully shaping edible lily bulbs cheerfully confides that nothing makes buildings, or people wearing suits. In into cherry blossom petals, he dyed the him happier than imagining the smiles 2011 Paquet was appointed head chef green petals pink and put together a of customers waiting eagerly for each at Camellia, the French restaurant at plateful of spring, so to speak, just the new offering. Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo. The sort of creation one might expect from Meals in the Paquet household are restaurant's windows look out on the the dexterous fingers of this master usually ordinary Japanese food ‒ miso hotel's Japanese garden. With its flitting chef. soup, natto, pickled plums and rice ‒ Garden Scenes Stimulate the Senses That was certainly a surprise, he birds and splendid floral displays through the seasons, the garden has the air of one that has been there for 22 2014 May&June Offering Menus to Match the Season prepared by his wife. Paquet's palate has become accustomed to flavors not found in France. Just as his gastronomic horizons have been not only chicken, but other birds such French cuisine, Paquet incorporates the extended by tasting Japanese food, as duck, guinea fowl and quail. Using a sensibilities of Japanese cuisine in his Paquet says he hopes Japanese will variety of sauces, he coaxes out the pursuit of new French flavor find that his cooking extends theirs. unique taste of each meat. Just as experiences. Japanese cuisine has the umami of Stocks and Sauces the Deciding Factors in Flavor dashi stock, in French cooking it is sauces that determine flavor. Occasionally, Paquet says, he Paquet's native region of Bresse is experiments with fusing Japanese and home to the highly-valued Bresse French flavors, noting that when chicken breed, and the chef was raised devising a special French menu to go on his mother's poultry dishes. In Japan with Japanese sake, he was surprised poultry usually means chicken, but Paquet's focus on poultry encompasses by how compatible they were. Thus while striving to offer quintessential DATA 2 -10- 8 Sekiguchi Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo Open: All year Hours: Lunch 11:00 ‒ 15:00 (last orders: 14:00) Dinner 17:00 ‒ 22:00 (last orders: 20:00) 2014 May& June 23 QR 1 Quality Review PLUM WINE YUMEHIBIKI Plum wine of Ohyama-machi Hita City, Oita Prefecture Yumehibiki, a Premium Plum Wine From Oyama-machi, Where Plums are Prized Photos (Left page)/Text: Yuko Iida Photos (Right page): Satoru Naito surrounding forests. With healthy Made with Oshuku plums patiently nurtured by contract farmers, this plum wine is slowly matured in white oak barrels. Oyama-machi is a small town nestled among forested mountains in the city of Hita, in Oita Prefecture. This hilly region, with almost no flat land, is naturally poorly suited to rice production. This is why, since around 1960, the entire town has worked hard to promote the cultivation of plum and chestnut trees. With the government mainly concerned with promoting rice production, the town came up with a clever slogan for their efforts̶ Plant plums and chestnuts and let s all go to Hawaii! ̶which proved successful. Farm income grew, and today Oyama-machi is known for having the highest ratio of passport holders in all of Japan. This initiative set the precedent for the one town, one product movement that was to follow. Since that time, Oyama-machi has continued to focus on producing fine quality plums. While this work has included upgraded technology, the town also developed a unique composting material utilizing the rich resources available from the earth to grow in, the plum trees send sensual. Even the name of the Oshuku plum out strong branches and roots, has romantic origins. During the warding off disease and pests. This is mid-Heian Period, the plum tree on also why levels of pesticide use have the grounds of the Seiryo-den (the naturally fallen off over time. Emperor s palace in Kyoto) had died, Today, the plum trees which the and it was decided that a tree would townspeople have labored over with be moved from the gardens of Ki no such care number nearly 12,000. Naishi, daughter of the famous poet Each year, nine plum varieties come and courtier Ki no Tsurayuki. On a into riotous bloom, beginning with the branch of that tree she tied a waka, or Nankou variety in March, followed by poem, which read Although this plum the Nanaore, the Shirakaga, the tree is being moved at the request of Oshuku and others. Finally between His Imperial Majesty, I wonder where late May and July, the trees become the bush warbler that kept its nest in laden with green fruit. This is when this tree each year will keep its nest farm families are busiest, harvesting now? Upon reading this poem, the the plums, drying and pickling them Emperor is said to have returned the and processing them into plum jam. plum tree. Oshuku is written with the characters for bush warbler and Use of the Finest Plums Brings Acclaim at Competition Overseas This is how plums from Oyamamachi have come to be known as Green Diamonds, and Yumehibiki is shelter. When the plum trees are in full flower, the bush warbler can be seen hopping from branch to branch among the blossoms, its beautiful song echoing among the hills as it stops to rest. Produced among such tranquil made with one of those varieties, the scenery, diligently nurtured by the Oshuku plum. Premium Yumehibiki is farmers of Oyama-machi, these plums produced by transferring plum wine become Yumehibiki, a premium-quality that has been aged for three years to plum wine. used white oak whiskey barrels, where it is allowed to ripen further. The lingering aroma of malt enhances the sweet-tart flavor of the plums, while the refreshing pungency of the white S h i n y g r e e n plums are t he product of lovingly nurtu red trees. oak imparts an elegant, rich finish. The result is a subtle, flavorful plum wine that might even be called ● Inquiries: Hibiki-no-Sato, 4587 Nishi-Oyama, Oyama-machi, Hita City, Oita Prefecture Tel. 0973-52-3000 24 2014 May&June Yumehibiki Barrel-Finished Premium Plum Wine Contents: 500ml Alcohol: 20% Price: 3,333 yen (excl. tax) (With wrapping cloth) Ingredients: Oshuku plums from Oyama, brewed alcohol, syrup 2014 May& June 25 QR 2 The minimalist design does not clash with any r oom décor. Quality Review AirEngine The dual-fan structure releases up to 10,000 liters of filtered air from th e top of the cleaner. AirEngine als o acts as an air circulator. AirEngine AirEngine by Balmuda: An Air Cleaning Device that Even Removes PM2.5 Photograph: Satoru Naito Text: JQR This air cleaner with two fans powerfully moves air and traps harmful airborne particles in the process. The first thing I noticed in the corner of this air cleaner s upper panel was a small round button with an airplane drawn on it. Why an airplane? I couldn t establish a connection between airplanes and air cleaners. When I pressed it, this white apparatus activated its jet cleaning mode , sucking up the surrounding air and then thrusting it out and up straight to the ceiling, producing howling sounds like a jet turbine. The whole phenomenon looked like a small tornado had emerged out of nowhere. It works like this: the air that is driven up to the ceiling by the powerful force of the top fan slowly travels down along the walls and is brought in again to the machine by the bottom fan, ad infinitum. In a nutshell, the machine circulates air in a continuous motion, and removes airborne impurities by allowing air to pass through its interior filter repeatedly. Dust and other fine particulates find their way indoors through the smallest of openings, as no house is airtight. They may be invisible to the human eye, but you can see them when you wipe your table and discover how dirty the cloth gets. These microscopic indoors. The filter boasts extremely particles can be exhaust fumes from high removal performance. When tested vehicles and factories, dust from in a residential room of about 25 square construction sites, and pollen, as well meters (260 square feet), it had a as dust storms traveling from China, capture rate of over 90% for airborne which are known as Yellow Sand. Of particles of 2.5 micrometers in 19 particular concern is fine particulate minutes and over 90% for airborne matter smaller than 2.5 micrometers, particles of 0.1 micrometer in 29 commonly known as PM2.5. minutes. Powerful enough to attract larger, heavier particles The cylindrical filter, called the 360° Enzyme Filter, efficiently filters the air that comes in from all four surfaces. Made of activated carbon, the honeycomb structure of the filter Japanese cryptomeria pollen is about effectively absorbs odors and 30 micrometers in diameter. Yellow accelerates their decomposition into Sand is about 5 micrometers. Compared water and carbon dioxide. For added to them, PM2.5, which is the term used peace of mind, Balmuda uses special to describe particles of 2.5 micrometers technology to coat the fibers of the filter or less, is extremely small. In fact, many with a bacteriolytic enzyme, which of the particles in the PM2.5 group deactivates viruses, mildews and molds measure around 0.3 micrometers and on contact. are easily inhaled and accumulated in the body, triggering respiratory and cardiovascular problems. We are told of this health risk but tend to ignore it on account of the particles invisibility. Let s face it: lots of PM2.5 particles are floating around indoors as well. The key feature of the AirEngine air cleaner is its dual fan structure ‒ one to bring air in and the other to expel it. The two fans work in tandem to release up to 10,000 liters of filtered air every minute. The AirEngine creates dynamic air circulation like an air circulator, allowing it to draw in and filter particulates that manage to reach The filter cleaning sign flashes after 500 hours of continuous operation. Use a va cuum cleaner to clean the surface of the filter. For efficient operation, the filter s hould be replaced every year. AirEngine is a dependable guard against a wide range of indoor particulates that can travel deep into your body without your knowledge and threaten your health. For details, please contact Balmuda (0120-686-717 (toll free) http://www. balmuda.com/jp/) *AirEngine was conceptualized and designed in Japan. 26 2014 May&June 「AirEngine」 Di me n s i o n s : 2 5 0 mm ( W) ×2 5 0 mm ( D) ×7 0 0 mm ( H) We i g h t : 8 . 0 Kg Po we r Re q u i r e me n t : AC1 0 0 V, 5 0 / 6 0 Hz Pr i c e : 4 7 , 4 2 9 y e n ( +t a x ) 2014 May& June 27 My Journey A DREAM IN PROGRESS Photos/Yosuke Suga Text/JQR Article 1 in a Series Hiroshi Moriyama Emeritus Professor, The Jikei University School of Medicine Former Director, The Jikei University Hospital I knew I had to make a living, so I decided to become a doctor. My Grandmother s Example I m the third generation of doctors in my father and uncle, but they were burned wouldn t object to letting us into their family. As our last name (Moriyama out of their home by the air raids during gardens if we asked. Looking back now, ̶ forest mountain ) might tell you, our World War II, and ended up moving to it was really a great time. The city family were originally timber merchants Tokyo s Edogawa district. I was born in looked dingy and run down, and the in Tochigi Prefecture. My grandfather, Edogawa in February of 1948. My whole country was poor, but people Fukusaburo Moriyama, graduated from brother was born six years later, but were always very laid back about what was then the Chiba School of died at the age of just 33. things. Medicine and later became a physician, After graduating from Tokyo Medical One day, I had a chance to talk with my but one day he fell off a carriage as he and Dental University, our father father about my future, and I told him I was making his rounds and died when worked at a hospital, then opened a wanted to go into archeology. His he was still in his mid-thirties. clinic in Koiwa around 1961. Our response was that archeology was all At the time his wife, Hana, was caring mother s older brother was also a well and good, but I d never make a for two young sons, ages five and two pharmacist, and ran a pharmacy in living from it. He pointed out that many ̶my father and my uncle. I guess she doctors̶like the writers Ogai Mori and thought that to provide for two small Morio Kita̶did something else on the children she d need some kind of side, and that I could always pursue vocation, but in any case she started archeology as a hobby. At the time, studying and entered a dental college. archeology truly wasn t any way to She must have been 25 or 26 at the make a living, and that must have time. Her older brother, who had opened worried him. That fact was what led me a dental practice in Ashikaga, paid her to begin thinking about becoming a tuition. Apparently she would leave my doctor. uncle at her parent s house and go to Actually, the one who really wanted to classes with my father on her back. The make a doctor out of me was our story is very similar to that of an NHK grandmother, perhaps because she d wanted to become one herself. She serial drama that ran back in the 60s, Gunma Prefecture, so I grew up was always the one who worried most was intent on pursuing my grandfather s surrounded by people in the medical about my grades. dreams̶in fact, she d actually hoped field. But I was just a regular kid, and Having grown up in the Meiji Period, to get into medical school. Later she not the least bit interested in medicine. my grandmother was a woman of grit said that trying to graduate from I failed all of my entrance exams for and character. She continued seeing medical school while raising two private high schools, and in the end had patients at her dental clinic until the children would have just been too to settle for a second-tier public high age of 82, and remained hale and difficult, and that s why she chose school. hearty until she died at 94. Because dentistry. Once I got to high school, I still didn t her clinic was also the family home, I After graduating from dental school want to become a doctor, so I joined knew firsthand what an examining room while raising two children on her own, the geology club and spent a lot of time felt like, and seeing my father rush out my grandmother acquired more training in Ishikawa, in the neighboring on house calls in the middle of the while working at a dental clinic, and prefecture, busily digging up fossils and night was an everyday thing. As a eventually opened her own clinic in clay pots. Ishikawa was famous for its result, I was perhaps more prepared to Kamata. That s where she raised my shell mounds, and back then farmers become a doctor in body than in mind. Ohana-han. I think my grandmother (To be continued) Hiroshi Moriyama 28 2014 May&June Emeritus Professor, the Jikei University School of Medicine; Former Director of the Jikei University Hospital; Honorary Member of the American Academy of Otolaryngology̶Head and Neck Surgery; Honorary Member of the European Rhin ologic Society; Co-chairman of the Oto-Rhino-Laryngological Society of Japan; Advisor to the Association of Japanese Medical Colleges. An international pioneer in the use of endoscopic surgery to treat paranasal sinus disease. 29