Saturday, May 14, 2016
A Beginner's Guide to Sushi: How to Get Over Your Fear and Start Loving it Raw!
Even though sushi has been a staple of Japanese cuisine for centuries, it only really became familiar to Americans in the 1980s, when it became a trend of yuppies. Now, it is quite common in the States as well, although there are many people who have yet to try this traditional Japanese delicacy. Yes, it does indeed involve raw stuff, weird condiments, and seaweed, but you can actually learn to love it. Follow my steps below, and you sushi neophytes will find yourselves happily munching away in no time!
First, the basics: Sushi is different from sashimi. Sashimi is raw, sliced fish, normally served with rice as a side dish. With sushi, the rice is integrated, which certainly makes the raw fish easier to go down for the American palate, but also please note: Not all sushi is raw, and it is also not always even fish. Cucumber, scallion, avocado and even egg are all used quite commonly in sushi.
Sushi is typically served in four basic forms:
1) Nigiri , a thin slice of fish atop a palm-length oval of seasoned rice, sometimes held in place with a little "seat belt" made of nori, a dark-green seaweed with a very mild taste. Two slices of nigiri make a serving at a typical sushi bar.
2) Maki , or rolled sushi, consisting of fish or other ingredients rolled up inside a thin sheet of nori and seasoned rice. Maki can be rolled with the nori on the outside, or "inside-out", with the rice showing. Inside-out rolls are usually coated with sesame seeds or tiny roe, usually either red Tobiko (flying fish eggs) or orange Masago (smelt eggs). Maki rolls are several inches long, but are cut into six bite-sized pieces per serving.
3) Temaki is a hand-rolled sushi (as opposed to maki, which is made with a bamboo mat). Temaki sushi has a distinctive "ice cream cone" shape, with the nori filled with rice and other ingredients and rolled with one closed end and one open.
4) Chirashi sushi simply consists of a bowl of assorted slices of sushi served atop a bed of rice. This is a common way for restaurants to use up whatever they have too much of so that everything stays fresh, so you will really get some odds and ends if you order this, but it's a good way to get a variety of tastes at a cheaper price.
Sushi is traditionally served with three condiments: Soy sauce, with which I believe we are already familiar; the peach- or gold-colored slices of gari, or ginger (many people eat this directly, but the taste is extremely strong. I would recommend you stick a couple of pieces into your soy sauce and let its flavor infuse that way); and wasabi, that bright green dollop perched atop a plastic leaf on the edge of your plate. Wasabi is a type of horseradish, and it is fairly strong. As they say: A little dab'll do ya. You may also want to just stick a tad of this in your soy sauce to make a "dip". The Sushi Nazi will not approve of the dip (technically, you are supposed to keep the ginger out of it, too), but I have dined in Japan and also at the venerable Hatsuhana in New York, and I have yet to get bounced from a sushi restaurant for doing this. WARNING: Just because wasabi is served on the side, do not assume it is not already in your sushi (look for a little smear between the fish and rice).
How to eat sushi: with hashi (chopsticks), of course, but also it is okay to use your fingers, especially for temaki. There's no excuse for using a fork, which will just cause everything to fall apart anyway. Fortunately the Japanese use chopsticks that are fairly short and also not slick, so there's a good grip. Practice with your chopsticks a little before the food comes, and remember: only the top chopstick is supposed to move; the bottom one stays stable in your hand.
Technically, you are not supposed to dip your sushi into the soy sauce rice-first, but flipping your sushi to get only the fish into the soy sauce is a good way to send it flopping onto the table, so do what is comfortable. Frankly, I like soy sauce, and rice soaks up more of it, so I'm an incorrigible rice-dipper.
To get used to the various kinds of sushi, I suggest you follow the steps below, which will let you build up slowly from the things that you will find more familiar to the things that might initially freak you out:
1. Start with sushi that is not raw--Ebi (cooked shrimp), California roll (crab stick and avocado), Tamago (an egg cake--slightly sweet, like egg custard), and Anago (grilled eel w/ bbq sauce). This will get you used to the rice-and-seaweed concepts.
2. Move on to sushi that is raw but doesn't taste like it--Sake (smoked salmon); or is served in small amounts--Teppa maki (tuna roll), Una-Q (eel and cucumber roll); or is cooked, but weird (octopus).
3. Step up to sushi that is raw but of a firm texture. Maguro (tuna), Hamachi (yellowtail), and Shiromi (whitefish) have delicate flavors; if you are up to tackling texture and taste, try also Saba (mackerel).
4. Graduate to stuff that tastes good but has sticky, slimy or squishy textures: Ika (squid), Mirugai (clam), Amaebi (sweet shrimp), Uni (sea urchin), Ikura (salmon roe), or Uzura (quail eggs). You may choose not to bother with this step. I tried this stuff and decided the taste didn't beat the texture.
5. Go for the weird stuff! Some restaurants serve Sawagani, tiny soft-shelled river crabs that you just munch up whole, legs and all.
So, there it is, your guide to sushi and how to sneak up on it. If you still think raw fish isn't your bag, remember, there's always Spam sushi, if you live in Hawaii. Cheers!
Image Credit » http://pixabay.com/en/sushi-sashimi-eat-restaurant-599721/ by nile
Sunday, May 1, 2016
Your May Birthday - May Holidays, Traditions and More
May starts with a holiday, May Day, that is actually two completely different holidays with the same name, one being a rather giddy affair involving begarlanded youths dancing around a flower-strewn pole (which, let's face it, was obviously a pagan fertility rite), and the other is a Communist celebration of the worker that is more like Labor Day, except that it tends to feature rather militaristic parades instead of barbecues and family reunions. To each his own! Speaking of barbecues (and, why not, military parades), May has the ever-popular Memorial Day, the unofficial beginning of summer, as well as Mother's Day. Could there be any more reasons to celebrate in May? Heck, yeah!
Monthly Observances
May is National Allergy / Asthma Awareness Month, although I believe I became aware of my allergies a little earlier this year, thanks. It is also the National Month for Arthritis, Barbecue, Bikes, Eggs, Foster Care, Good Car-Keeping (so keep your National Egg Month celebrations far away, please), Hamburgers, Hepatitis Awareness, Meditation, Mental Health, Military Appreciation, Moving, Osteoporosis Prevention, Physical Fitness and Sports, Physiotherapy, Preservation, Salad, Salsa, Smiles, Stroke Awareness, Revising Your Work Schedule, and Vinegar (good timing, with the salad and all, I must say). It's also National Photo Month, so make sure you take pictures of those nicely-kept cars and your favorite hamburgers.
May is also International Audit Month (eek!), as well as the International Month for Business Image Improvement, Victorious Women (yay!) and Lyme Disease Awareness, so if you are being audited and you point out the weird, bullseye-shaped rash on your auditor's leg, she will be treated in time to become victorious over her Lyme Disease and will certainly give you a pass on the audit out of gratitude, thereby improving your business image. Snaps for Lyme Disease Awareness!
Weirdest Holiday: I couldn't decide between National Two Different Colored Shoes Day (3rd) and Slugs Return from Capistrano Day (28th), although I am at no loss to determine which one would be easier to observe.
May Traditions
Flower: lily of the valley - humility, sweetness
Birthstone: emerald - tranquility, luck in love
Taurus's gem: emerald
Zodiac sign: Taurus (1-21) and Gemini (22-31; see June for details). Taurus the Bull is an earth sign, as stable and immovable as the ground under your feet. Also immovable is the bull, who has a reputation for stubbornness. On the good side, that translates into stick-to-it-iveness, loyalty, and reliability, but Taureans may have a hard time adapting to change or seeing other points of view. Best friends: Virgo and Capricorn. Best love matches: Pisces, Scorpio and Cancer.
Famous Birthdays: Bing Crosby (2nd), Audrey Hepburn (4th), Karl Marx (5th), Willie Mays (6th), Billy Joel (9th), Yogi Berra (11th), Stevie Wonder (13th), Liberace (16th), Pope John Paul II (18th), Cher (20th), Bob Dylan (24th), Miles Davis (25th), Vincent Price (27th), Gladys Knight (28th), John F. Kennedy (29th), Clint Eastwood (31st).
Catholic Feast Days
1- St Brieuc, St Marculf, St Peregrine Laziosi, St Sigismund of Burgundy
2 -St Athanasius of Alexandria, Sts Exsuperius & Zoe, Ste Mafalda, St Wiborada
3- Our Lady of Czestochowa, St James the Less, St Philip
4 -St Florian, Ste Pelegia of Tarsus
5 -St Aventine, Ste Judith, St Hilary of Arles
6 -Ste Ava, St John Before the Latin Gate
7 -St Domitian, St John of Beverly
8 -St Victor Maurus, St Wiro
9- St Tudy, St Pachomius
10- St Cathal, St Job, Ste Solangia
11- St Gengulf, St Claudian Mamertus
12- St Dominic of the Causeway, St Francis Patrizzi, St Pancras
13- Ste Imelda, St Servais, the Blessed Dame Juliana of Norwich, Ste Rolanda
14- St Boniface of Tarsus, St Matthias, the Blessed Giles of Portugal
15- Ste Dymphna, Ste Hallvard, St Isidore the Farmer
16- St Brendan, St Honoratus, St John Nepomucen, St Simon Stock, St Ubald
17- St Madern, St Paschal Baylon
18- St Eric, St Theodotus, St Venantius
19- St Celestine V, St Dunstan, Ste Pudentiana, St Yves
20- St Bernardino of Siena, St Ethelbert
21- St Constantine the Great, St Eugene de Mazenod, St Godric
22- Ste Juliana of Corsica, Ste Rita of Cascia
23- St Didier, St William of Rochester
24- Our Lady, Help of Christians; Ste Sara; Ste Joanna
25- St Bede, St Urban I St Gregory VII, St Zenobius
26- Ste Mariana de Paredes y Flores, Ste Mary Magdalen dei Pazzi, St Philip Neri
27- St Augustine of Canterbury, the Blessed Bartholomea Bagnesi
28- St Bernard of Montjoux, St Germanus
29- Ste Bona
30- St Ferdinand III, Ste Joan of Arc, St Walstan
31-Our Lady of High Grace, Ste Petronilla
The fun isn't confined to May! Check out these other months:
January - http://bucketofuseful.blogspot.com/2017/01/your-january-birthday-january-holidays.html
February - http://bucketofuseful.blogspot.com/2016/02/your-february-birthday-february.html
March - http://bucketofuseful.blogspot.com/2016/03/your-march-birthday-march-holidays.html
April - http://bucketofuseful.blogspot.com/2016/03/your-april-birthday-april-holidays.html
June - http://bucketofuseful.blogspot.com/2017/05/your-june-birthday-holidays-traditions.html
July - http://bucketofuseful.blogspot.com/2017/07/your-july-birthday-july-holidays.html
August - http://bucketofuseful.blogspot.com/2016/07/your-august-birthday-august-holidays.html
September - https://bucketofuseful.blogspot.com/2019/08/your-september-birthday-september.html
October - http://bucketofuseful.blogspot.com/2016/09/your-october-birthday-october-holidays.html
November - http://bucketofuseful.blogspot.com/2017/10/your-november-birthday-november.html
December - http://bucketofuseful.blogspot.com/2016/12/your-december-birthday-december.html
Image from Pixabay https://pixabay.com/en/apple-blossom-blossom-bloom-1125908/
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