martedì 16 novembre 2010

Japan :: #2 :: Food

Here it continues the sets of theme photos regarding our recent trip to Japan. This time it's about "food". We love japanese food, but in Italy it is quite different than in Japan. Here it's mostly all about sushi and tempura, but in Japan the variety of plates is huge, and different from region to region. In Tokyo it's possible to find everything to eat, but as it was our first stop in Japan, we tried mostly sushi at those fantastic kaiten restaurants (with different plates on a rolling mat), which was such an experience thanks to our friends Ayako and Yukiko that suggested sushi to eat and ordered it for us. Another fun and interesting experience in Tokyo was to go to a supermarket and be amazed by all the different food and beverages they have in Japan. All completely different than in Italy. I must admit that going to supermarkets and get some typical ingredients of the foreign place we are visiting, is something we do every time we travel somewhere abroad. We love checking all the different products, try strange flavors and find something to be amazed about. We couldn't bring much stuff back home, but we bought something little and also we bought some foody gifts. :)

The south of Japan (Osaka and Hiroshima) are famous for their tasty food such asOkonomiyaki, Teriyaki meat and some kind of fried pork served with rice and a tasty curry souce. Very yummy!

When we were on the go, we preferred to get something typical, than burgers or sandwiches. In fact we often ate Onigiri and Bento boxes. Onigiri are little triangular rice balls filled with different ingredients: chicken, tuna, egg, etc... and they are sold wrapped into a nori seaweed sheet, while bento boxes are plates composed by different kinds of food, presented in a box with many compartments where different components of the plate are separated and presented into a scenographic way. In Japan the common rule for food is: "eat" with your eyes, then with your mouth, which means that the presentation and composition of the food is as important (or even more important) than the taste. I must admit that I agree with this concept about presentation and composition of the plates, but at the same time I also disagree with the fact that presentation is more important than taste!! In my opinion taste and presentation should be combined for the best result!

Sometimes we also ate soba (japanese noodle) and my favorite were those with sesame sauce. Sesame is in general a very common ingredient in the japanese cousine and we also tried beverages and ice creams made with sesame and tasting like that.

Japanese sweets aren't our cup of tea. They are often a cheat: they look fantastic, it seems like they are filled with chocolate cream of vanilla cream...but, when you bite one, you fall into a cruel reality: it's not chocolate but it's mashed azuki beans (black or white)!!!! They also sell some little sweet balls made with rice. They aren't particularly good to me: they are chewy and filled with strange flavors. Fortunately in most places there were coffee shops or french bakeries that were selling European style or American style sweets, especially for breakfast.

I must admit that japanese have learned to cook other international cousines very very well. One night in Kyoto we went out to eat in an Italian restaurant (we really needed some italian spaghetti!!), right in front of our hotel. The name of the restaurant is "Second House" and it really became our second house in Kyoto!!! With our great surprise and happiness they cooked fantastic plates of pasta, right in the same way we would cook it in Italy. Really good and at a very reasonable price. Also french pastries are made very well in some bakeries around Japan.

The king of all beverages in Japan is green tea at all. Then it's followed by local beers (such as "Asahi" or "Sapporo"), plum wine and sake. Japanese have also invented a very massive beverages vending machines system. You can find cold or hot beverages everywhere...at every corner there is a vending machine. It's so typical!!! We used these vending machines very very veeeeery often, because in August the heat was unbearable and we were loosing so many liquids going around. We always had something fresh in our hand to drink while walking around. One of our favorite beverage was jasmine iced tea, but also Wonda iced coffee and some grape flavored drinks.

Last but not least to remember are a couple of unique experiences we had: one was to stay and eat in a real Buddhist temple in Koya-san, the most important place for the japanese Buddhism. We could experience the real buddhist food shojin ryori, prepared only with vegetables. We ate a dinner and a breakfast in a fantastic old dining room into this temple, in the most typical and authentic japanese style. Another unique - but also traumatic - experience was another dinner in the japanese Alps, while we were staying at the Takaragawa onsen. They served us a bear soup and other kinds of strange foods that we still don't know what they were!!!
Here are some photos about our japanese food experience in Japan (summer 2010).

Enjoy!
1. Lunch at Bill Granger's restaurant "Bill" in Kamakura
2. Drinking iced coffee Wonda
3. First time in a kaiten sushi restaurant in Tokyo
4. Dinner at Mc Donald's with a teriyaki burger
5. Some typical and "kawaii" sweets
6. More "kawaii" sweets shaped like bunnies
7. Hello Kitty cakes (only in Kiddy Land Omotesando)
8. Teriyaki sticks in Beppu
9. Noodles in Beppu
10. The famous Beppu Pudding cooked in the hot thermal water
11. Soba eating in Beppu
12. Curry pork with rice in Hiroshima
13. A typical cake...filled with azuki beans
14. Maple leaf cake, a speciality of Hiroshima and Miyajima Island
15. Tempura in Hiroshima
16. Okonomiyaki in Osaka
17. A stop by the temple, drinking green tea in Nara
18. Fake food on a stall in Kyoto's Nishiki Market
19. A great dessert in Kyoto
20. A bento box on the go...
21. Ice with sweet syrup in Kyoto (very typical during summer in Japan!)
22. Finally...PASTA! ;) in Kyoto
23. A yummy cake in Kyoto
24. Iced tea with lemon and lime (for me) and wild berries (for Ely) in Kyoto
25. Sesame icecream in Kyoto
26. Breakfast at the Buddhist temple in Koya-san
27. Breakfast at the Buddhist temple in Koya-san
28. Another foody break during a visit in a temple in Koya-san
29. Italian food again, in Osaka
30. A stop for some donuts shopping at Osaka's Krispy Kream shop
31. Matcha Frappuccino and Cinnamon roll at Starbucks in Kanazawa
32. Tea ceremony in Kanazawa
33. Breakfast on the train.
34. Shabu-Shabu at Takaragawa Onsen's restaurant
35 . More kaiten sushi in Tokyo
36. Sushi
37. Sushi
38. Preparing green tea after sushi dinner in Tokyo

giovedì 11 novembre 2010

venerdì 5 novembre 2010

Fancy engagement renewal

Last weekend Ely and I spent a long weekend in Milan in order to take a romantic fancy break, see some friends, do some shopping and - last but not least - renew our engagement promises.

On Friday we arrived in Milan in the late afternoon, because we had to finish working. Just after settled in our hotel and left all the luggage there, we headed to the Duomo and later I took Ely to Tiffany & Co. to buy her a little but special gift to celebrate our engagement renewal. That same afternoon we met our dear friend Ursula and we had a fantastic fancy aperitif at the H Club by the Sheraton Diana Majestic Hotel near Porta Venezia.

On Saturday, in the morning we visited the new Dalì exhibition at the Royal Palace and after a fast food lunch we spent the rest of the afternoon shopping at the Rinascente and in the Brera area. We also found that Ladurèe just opened a branch store in Milan and couldn't resist to get some macaroons...divine!!!
For Saturday evening I planned a special dinner for me and Ely. In fact I booked a table at the Dolce & Gabbana's restaurant "Gold" , where we ate a fantastic pasta and a delicious dessert with real gold leaves all accompanied by great prosecco. Really really an experience!!! So we celebrated our engagement renewal and spent a great night out.
On Sunday the weather in Milan was terrible, so we decided to extend our weekend in Switzerland at a Spa in Vals, and it worthed the 4 hours drive because the weather was much better in Vals (even if we had to pass a snowstorm at the San Bernardino's pass!!) and the spa was really relaxing. Moreover the mountain village of Vals is so nice and really typical. The area is also famous for the water Valser, rich of minerals and really good. We stayed in a very nice Gasthaus in Vals and our room was tiny but very comfortable, with all walls, ceiling and floor covered with wood. That evening at 9pm we were so tired that we went to bed just after dinner. No Halloween celebrations this year...and our pumpkin was left uncarved in Trento...
On Monday morning just after breakfast, we had a walk around the village of Vals and on the way back home we also visited the town of Chur and Vaduz, the capital of the Principality of Liechtenstein ( a very tiny state between Switzerland and Austria).
Chur - Switzerland

Vaduz - Liechtenstein
[Photos by Ely]