Japanese Country Cookbook is one of the nitty gritty books. Ive also got the Jewish Gourmet, and Ive seen the Christmas Cookbook, and havent been particularly impressed. The Christmas Cookbook has the way cool typo telling you to take some eggs and heat well. The previous owner had--no doubt after an embarrassing mistake--crossed out the h in heat and replaced it with a b...
The Japanese Country nitty gritty book is different; right from opening it, you can see that it is more finely crafted. Its the same odd wider-than-tall shape, and from the outside looks like any of the other nitty gritties. Inside, however, the paper is textured brown, a bit harder to read but very beautiful. The illustrations are tastefully done, in what the author claims is a traditional style.
These are not recipes for the highly stylized, ritualistic meals generally associated with Japanese eating. This is peasant food: country cooking, and both easier to prepare and less imposing to the eye. Those who are without servants and have little leisure time cannot admire every carrot slice.
He starts out with the standards: sukiyaki, tempura, teriyaki. He then branches into vegetables uses: daikon, cucumber, kim chee; there are a lot of soups, made with fish, or rice, or eggs; egg dishes, tofu, noodles. One chapter describes simple sushi rolls and how to make them--I had impressive cucumber rolls the first time, and had great compliments at the office Christmas party.
Everything includes cultural background and stories. Koge, for example, is the crisp brown rice that gets stuck on the bottom of the pan if you forget about your rice for a few minutes. Form it into balls, mixed perhaps with toasted sesame, or seaweed, and dipped into shoyu. Unfortunately, the electric rice cooker is creeping into even the most remote reaches of the rural areas of Japan, and these gadgets unfortunately turn out perfectly cooked rice very time and leave no koge.
The glossary in the back describes Japanese cooking terms, and, when appropriate, suggests alternatives for use in recipes.
Sample: Chicken Teriyaki with Sesame1 pound chicken, breast, or thighs in bite-size pieces, 6 tblsp shoyu soy sauce, 6 tblsp sake, 6 tblsp sesame oil, 1 clove crushed garlic, 2 tsp minced ginger, 6 tblsp pan toasted sesame seeds. Combine all except sesame seeds, marinate an hour (or more, turning a few times). Drain, skewer on a bambook pick. Boil for 5-6 minutes, turning once. Roll in sesame seeds and serve hot. | ||
| I Paid: $4.50 | Rating: Good choice for simple Japanese cooking. | Publisher: Nitty Gritty Books |