Monday, April 26, 2010

home with Chef, Nara, Japan- IV

Day 4. As usual, my brother and I had our breakfast in our hotel, before meeting up with chef. And as usual, we stuffed our faces with onigiri おにぎ, wanting to savour every bit of Japan as much as we could. Then-

Lunch. Ramen. Saika Ramen, a popular ramen shop in Nara.
Can't say no to this cute waitress ( きれいおねちゃん!).
Kaarage set, chashuu ramen, saika ramen. It's good, but it is waay too salty, even by Japanese standards. Chef said it tastes different from the last time he had eaten here.
It took us 1 hour to get from Nara to Osaka, with Ami chan manning the wheel and the rest of us sleeping like open-mouth ducks. We went to visit our supplier, Hirata san.

Tour.
Yay. Done with the less interesting bit. On to my favourite part of the day: patisserie-hunt; Monsieur Makino, http://www.m-makino.com/. It is one of the top patisseries in Osaka. This is one of their main branches. For such a large shop front, they only allow take-aways. Don't you think the structure of the shop itself looks like a decoration cake??
Cute waitstaff (きれいおねちゃん): A necessity.
heh heh heh... go on and drool. =P
We took away 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 slices for after-dinner dessert. This is called legitimate market research.
Beautiful! but taste-wise, I still think my chef is better. Honest to god.
Ami chan's family. We had shabu shabu with Ami chan's father, his wife cooked. Deliciousss... marbled pork slices. I swear, between themselves, my brother and AJ demolished 3 platters of shabu shabu pork. I am more modest... half a platter is enough. hohoho.
We visited Jun chan, Ami chan's cousin, after dinner.
And I thought my chef was this cool guy (note the past tense) until he picked up the hula-hoop and started hula-hooping... ._.'"
Jun chan (mother) and Iku kun (son). Jun chan has got the cutest voice I have ever heard in person. Whenever I hear Jun chan and her granddaughter talk, I would think it is two little girls talking, and when I actually witness it in person, my lower jaw would drop and go "oh".
We all decided to go for Onsen together after a very full dinner (many platters of fatty marbled pork AND dessert). They say onsen is anti-fattening.
Going for onsen by yourself as a foreigner, no matter how many times, is different from going for onsen with a local Japanese. Onsen is not merely about hot water bath. There are green tea bath, electric water bath, jacuzzi bath and salt bath. Jun chan taught me the ropes.
Salt bath is by far the most extreme (most painful) I have tried. It was like being submerged in a hot water bath; the sauna room is about 40 degrees celsius (the same temperature as a hot water bath) with plenty of steam and moisture in the air. Well, I felt like I was slowly being steamed alive. Jun chan hands me a cup of salt, then we proceed to rub salt all over our bodies. Excellent remedy for water retention, but at that time and then, I thought of myself as a piece of lamb chop, and I was marinating it. We rubbed our tummies, our thighs, our arms, then the worst happened. I blinked. Salty sweat stunk my eye. I became blind in one eye. Very very bad. The room, smoky and dimly-lit as it is, is being filled as more naked bodies walked into my blur vision. Did I mention I was mildly claustrophobic? Get me out of here! I barely muttered, "げんかいです... (this is my limit)" before rushing for the water barrel to rinse out the salt, then I bolted for the door.
It was THE EXPERIENCE of the entire trip. However torturous, I probably would do it again, and again. One suffers for beauty, they say. I did loose 500g after all. =)
End.

Home with Chef, Nara, Japan- III

Day 4- Our day started with lunch, at a soba shop near Yakushiji temple. The beautiful garden which we could see from the room we were eating in.
Kitsune udon set and tenzaru soba. Eating cold soba in cold weather is like eating ice-cream in cold weather: shiok!!!
On to Yakushiji.
I like this temple. It has an aura of calm and wisdom.
We gladly took refuge from the cold (freakishly cold today) in the teahouse just outside Yakushiji. I was introduced to Higashi 乾菓子, a dry type of wagashi. It tastes like shortbread without butter, and it melts into a sweet gooey mess in your mouth. Not the best texture in the world, but tolerable. Thank god for the matcha...
Dinner at Chef's parent's place, Okasan's cooking: Oden and wagyu tataki. It's wonder-wonderfully delicious...
Thanks you very much for the beautiful dinner. I hope to come again, and many many times after! =D
End.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Home with Chef, Nara, Japan- II

Day 3. Breakfast at the hotel. It's like being a kindergardener all over again. Plastic trays!
Waiting for chef to pick us up.
Onwards to the Shrine of the White Snake Goddess. At the base of the shrine, we found a hand-made somen shop that has a beautiful garden, and pots of lovely flowers.
Second breakfast, warm somen and roast sweet potato.
みわさん え 行きます!
Why are there red maple leaves in the middle of Spring, I wonder?? Perhaps it's the power of miwa san...
Walking up to the shrine, where I got my fortune told. 吉 A good sign. =)
We visited ami-chan's aunt, a very giving and generous lady who spoke not a word of English but we understood her anyway. I found out that some gestures are international.
Persimmon leaf-wrapped zushi!! I'd wanted to try this a long time ago.. finally! yumm yumm, I like the smell of the persimmon leaf. うれしい!
Ishi buta, our next sight-seeing venue, is ermm... a pile of rocks manually hauled and put together by ancient Japanese.
Rocks are alright, but the flowers are truly a sight to behold.
Teatime! A wagyu speciality shop.
The average price of wagyu, 300g plus, (nicely marbled) is about 500yen, which translates to about S$8. Am I right to say that the extra $50 we usually see on menus comes from freight? What a joke...
We bought wagyu croquette and katsu to eat. They actually fry their wagyu... and man, it is delicious.
Dinner at chef's home. Sukiyaki!! Chef's mother, sister and wife prepared dinner for us. ごちそうさまでした!
End.