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Japanese food and culture

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Japanese Food and Culture... The Meal gohan• Two Kinds of Food: – ‘Staple’ and ‘Other dishes’ – Staple gohan is rice – Other dishes okazu are fish, meat, vegetables... Traditional Concep

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Japanese Food and Culture

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The Island of Japan

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The Meal (gohan)

• Two Kinds of Food:

– ‘Staple’ and ‘Other dishes’

– Staple (gohan) is rice

– Other dishes (okazu) are fish, meat, vegetables

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Traditional Concept of Meal

• Neutral flavor of rice considered complement to meal

• Fill up on gohan, okazu stimulate appetite

• Traditional meal has no Western counterpart

• Sake = rice, so the two are not consumed simultaneously

• Most basic meal: rice, soup, side dish

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Courses of a typical Japanese meal

today

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Side dishes with rice and with sake

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The Table

• Zen

– Traditional, personal table

– Box with tray, individual sets of bowls, chopsticks, spoons

– 20-30 cm per side 15-20 cm high

– Cleaned 3x a month

– Location from kitchen indicated status – Men > Women, Elderly > Junior

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The Table

• Chabudai

– Low dining table

– Adapted from Western dining tables – 30 cm high

– More convenient than zen

●Fewer plates set

●Cleaner – Indicative of culture change

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The Table

• Table and Chairs

– Today Western dining table and chairs are

adopted

– Began with farmers (to avoid mud on tatami floor)

– Gradually spread in popularity

– As Japanese economy grew and democracy expanded, expensive Western furniture was in vogue

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Zen and Chabudai

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Chopsticks and Manners

• Japanese differ from Chinese

• Made of lacquered wood

• Women and children have smaller chopsticks

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Etiquette-As You Like It

• Traditionally: alternate rice and side dish

• Acceptable to hold bowl of rice/soup to eat

• Sake served warm

However: Japanese table manners developed on the premise of eating from tiny individualized tables

(zen), while using Japanese tableware for Japanese cuisine consisting mainly of rice.

Today Japanese, Western, or Chinese-style utensils may be used, foreign foods are part of the cuisine, etc.

Traditional etiquette has not made the transition

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• Sumashi-jiru—clear stock/salt broth

• Miso-shiru—miso dissolved into thick solution Includes vegetables, meat, etc to be eaten with chopsticks

Broth is typically drunk from bowl, which is held in the left hand (chopsticks right)

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Umami aka “Deliciousness”

• Dashi—soup stock made chiefly from kelp but also dried bonito, dried sardines, and shitake

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Sashimi—Cuisine not cooked

• Japanese philosophy: “Food should be enjoyed as close as possible

to natural state”

• Sashimi—raw fish

• Raw -> Grill -> Simmer, depending on freshness of fish

• Prefer sea fish over freshwater because of the odor

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Sushi—Fast Food

• 19th century popular snack food

• Men majority of sushi chefs

• Dip fish side in sauce

• Pickled ginger between pieces to “extinguish taste”

• Nigari-zushi—rice with raw fish on top

• Maki-zushi—seaweed rolls

• Inari-zushi—bean curd pouch w/ rice

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Sushi

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How to roll maki-zushi

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Japanese Cuisine

• Suyaki—beef

• Fugu—puffer fish, delicacy

• Tofu and Natto soybeans

• Tempura

• Noodles

• Pickles and Preserved Seafood

– Daikon

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• Mochi—rice cakes

• Sugar historically rare

• Green tea taken after meals to “quench thirst and change the mood”

• Sweets taken with tea between meals

• Dessert stems from Western influence

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Sake v Green Tea

• Sake wine and tea are opposites

• Sweet-tooth type or drinking type

• Ceramic cups, bowls, pots used for green tea

• Cups with handles used for coffee

• Milk and soda are served in glasses

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Culture Change

• Isolated for 2.5 centuries

• This period is known as the Edo period

• Allowed Japanese culture/cuisine

to distinctly develop

• 1958 Japan forced to trade with US, Britain, France, Netherlands, and Russia

• Raw silk and tea

• Contact with Western culture  adoption of meat into cuisine

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Western Influence

-As foreign foods are adopted, intake of rice decreases

-Though adopt foreign foods, still keep traditional principles

-Food modified for chopsticks-Soy sauce replaces special sauces-“reorder and reorganize” foreign elements to fit Japanese form

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Western Influence

• Bread—equated with rice so bread and rice not eaten together (like sake)

• Pizza

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Squid Ink Pizza

Ngày đăng: 06/11/2016, 13:14

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