Showing posts with label Baking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baking. Show all posts

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Bread and Shinies

Hi! This will be another assortment of random topics...I just have some interesting pictures to put up, so I have to include the stories. :)

First, kanji lesson of the week! Aizawa Sensei likes showing us random kanji, so I'll post some of the fun stuff here. First, in Japan clubs are a huge deal in high school - everyone is in one, pretty much. The term for students not in a club is pretty amusing (I think, anyway): 帰宅部. '帰' comes from 帰る, return, ’宅’ derives from お宅, the polite term for house, and 部 means 'club'. So, it's the "Return Home Club". XD Another one is more abstract. This character, 門, is the "gate" radical - it's in a lot of things. And the kanji for sound is '音'. Put them together and you get 闇, darkness. Why, you ask? It's because the only sense that is any use is your hearing...sound is your "gateway" to understanding what's going on in the dark. :D
Moving on to shiny things! I have to show off my Japanese cell phone a bit. Thanks to the 100-yen shop down the road and a bit of ingenuity, I now have a garish-fantastic phone that actually looks like a Japanese phone. My phone charms are a bit lacking (ie I only have 2), but this is a pretty good representation of peoples' phones here. Absolutely everything on one's phone is customizable, and people go to town on theirs. And most phones come in at least 6 different colors - it's easy to have an individualized phone. Makes me wish you could do this with things other than iPhones in America!I will miss all the various smilies you can text. This is one of 8 pages of icons! Some are animated, while others aren't. My personal favorites are the ferris wheel, the ghost, and the rocket ship (none pictured here). As far as other cell phone tricks go, the Japanese predictive text option is great! It's a really clever system. English texting is sort of really fail, but livable. Having a cell phone here makes life really convenient. I can't access the internet or text internationally, but it's so much easier to stay in touch with people here! Plus, I feel much safer when traveling by myself.Besides the normal class stuff, we haven't done much this week but bake! We made apple bread and strawberry bread yesterday, and it was delicious! I really wish I had the implements to make something like cupcakes, but that will have to wait until I get home.

As far as travel plans are concerned, we're running out of weekends to go places so I'm starting to make final plans. The TM Revolution concert was sold out (sad day!), so instead I'm going to Nagoya with some friends before they go to a concert themselves. Jury's still out on if I'll join them. :) Other big plans are Tokyo in 1 week, Osaka (again) in 3, and Nara in 4. Might as well make the most of my time left, right?

Have a great end to your week!

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Back to Class!



Let's start with a fun subway icon. :) These are on the special reserved seats you're required to give up for the various people on the squares.

I have more kanji fun for you today as well, though it is a little morbid. The characters for euthanasia are 安楽死. These characters are in the words 安い(inexpensive), 楽しい(fun/enjoyable), and 死ぬ(die). So, together it means "cheap fun death"! In actuality the first character can also mean "to ease" and the second can mean "pleasurable", so it really means "to ease death/make it more bearable". Kanji is fun, right?

On Monday I met with my internship supervisor and went to the elementary school to get a weekly schedule figured out. The school I'll be working at is called Johoku Elementary (which literally means 'north of the castle'), and I'll be working on Mondays for 2 hours a week. The internship actually only lasts 4 weeks as classes end for students in March (and the new school year starts in April!), which is sort of a shame but it should be a fun few weeks. Another girl is doing the internship with me, and we're going to be at the school for 2 periods: one period in which we help teach English, and another in which we participate in club activities. I'm joining the science club. ;) I'm a little nervous about starting on Monday because I really don't know what's going on besides when I should show up, but it should probably all work out in the end!

As far as interesting adventures, not much has gone on this week. We've mainly been watching shows (my count of shows-in-progress has now reached 7) and studying (because preparing for class every day is becoming lots of work!). However, we did make blueberry bread on Monday. Fruit is expensive here, but it's totally worth it because the bread was so very tasty. I now am master of the convection oven, and have figured out that a half-batch of bread (ie 1 American loaf pan-worth) makes 3 Japanese loaves - great for sharing and using as incentive to get kitchen helpers. :D My friends and I have decided to make this a weekly thing! I think we're going to give apple bread a try next.

I also had Indian food today! The main shopping thoroughfare in Hikone is called Bell Road - it's about a 15-20 minute ride away. They have lots of stores and restaurants along it, including an Indian place called Sapna. It had the best naan and chicken curry I have ever tasted. I'll have to get a picture the next time I go because it's so so so good.

As far as life in general in Japan is going, it's going well. It's amazing how quickly the weeks fly by. I can't believe tomorrow's Thursday! The weather is starting to warm up a bit...we haven't had snow in almost a week! This is making it a lot easier to get around town, so I'm biking more. I'm getting used to classes and hanging out with people lots(42 and study parties - almost feels like home). I was a little homesick earlier in the week, but it's easy to not worry so much about that with so much going on! It sort of feels like life at home is on hold while I'm here - I keep forgetting I have to worry about things like class registration for next semester and figuring out grad schools when I'm here in Japan. I'm sure it will hit me once I'm home again. :)

Anyway, I hope you're having a good week. I know there's a "snowpocalypse" blanketing the US right now, so stay warm! Also, in case you've heard anything about the volcano eruption in Japan, don't worry! Kyushu(where the eruption is occurring) is a completely different island, and very much south of us. Take care!

Friday, January 21, 2011

Tea and Cake (or death?)

Hello! I hope you all are well. :) I'm unfortunately feeling a bit under the weather. Thankfully I don't have the cold/flu/whatever it is that's going around JCMU...just a really upset stomach and a lack of good sleep (3 days of not sleeping well will do that). My exam grade today probably suffered because of it because I decided to forgo studying in favor of sleep, but it will probably turn out okay.

Speaking of things that have turned out okay, I have 2 separate kitchen triumphs to talk about.

The first is just a quick one - Gyuudon was successful. It's basically thinly-sliced beef, onions, and mushrooms in a sweetish soy-based sauce(made from scratch, of course!). My roommate is allergic to beef and still was tempted to try it because it smelled so good. Definitely going in my recipe book.

And the second is carrot cake! :D

Let me first explain why making carrot cake was so difficult here in Japan. First, finding a recipe is a challenge. Japanese grocery stores have a lot of things! The problem is that the types of things they carry differ greatly from that of American grocery stores. So, my baking ingredients are a little limited. Any recipes with things like molasses, apple sauce, buttermilk, and the like are out because I just can't find them here. So, it took a while to find a simple-enough recipe (and you've already heard of my travails at the grocery store trying to find all of the ingredients).

Part 2 was the lack of utensils. Instead of an oven, we have a little convection oven (ie our microwave). It actually works just like a regular oven - you preheat it and then just set a bake time and it cooks. So, that was easier than I thought. Another problem is Japanese cake pans - they have a diameter of roughly 6.15 inches (which doesn't even translate to a round number in centimeters!). This is very different from the 8 or 9" pans we have. Japanese pans are also taller. Plus, my recipe suggested a 9x13 pan would be best to bake this cake in. That wasn't going to work. So now, I had no reliable batter amount (should I halve the recipe or leave it whole?), no reliable cook temperature AND no reliable cook time. Yay! Luckily, allrecipes.com came to my rescue (love that site, by the way - check it out sometime!) with a conversion article. While it didn't address Japanese cake pans (what a surprise!) I was able to apply the information and figured out that 2/3 of the batter amount would work (though measuring 2/3 of 4 eggs would be an interesting challenge).

Part 3: the mixing of the cake and icing. Of course, there were 3 more minor issues: I had no measuring spoons, so I just eyeballed the spice additions and hoped they would work out. AND I had no hand-mixer/wire whisk so the frosting had to be mixed with a fork. AND my grater was about the size of a can of soup (the small ones), so it took about 45 minutes to grate all the carrots.

By the end, it actually started to look like carrot cake. I was getting pretty hopeful. All that was left was the baking. I decided to stick with 180 degrees Celsius (roughly 350 degrees) for 20 minutes. The bottom tier took about 28 minutes and the top tier took more like 35 (because there was more batter in the pan the second time). But they came out beautifully golden brown so I was happy. All that was left was the icing and then the taste-testing.

Success. :) Because I'm nitpicky, I found the cake to be a little denser than I wanted, and lacking in a bit of cinnamon or salt (or probably both) - the cream cheese frosting wasn't too cream-cheesy, either. But it was pretty darn tasty, and neither undercooked nor burnt. And, most importantly, my roommate loved it.

In other news, today we had our second cultural presentation - tea ceremony! It's a very ritualistic tradition that's now mainly done as a hobby in Japan. The tea you drink is macha, or green tea. It's a lot stronger than the stuff we have in the US, and pretty bitter. I'm starting to acquire the taste, though.

We performed the tea ceremony in the tatami room, a special room in the academic building designed like an old-fashioned Japanese room. It has tatami floors and rice-paper sliding screen doors, and is only opened for special occasions. Very cool. :)

The ladies performed the ceremony for us twice - the second time, we got to join in. Traditionally you're served a season-specific sweet in addition to the green tea. We had "Nightingale mochi", so named because nightingales are some of the first birds to be heard in the spring. The treat is mochi (a gluey dough made from rice) filled with the red bean paste I've talked about before (yum) and coated in some kind of soybean that tastes like the green tea. You're supposed to eat the snack to sort of counteract the bitterness of the tea to come.
All in all, I enjoy watching tea ceremonies. They're very unique, and I love the exactitude the ceremony requires. It's like a very well-choreographed dance performance, and the guest has a part to play in the ritual as much as the host. There's a specific method to pouring the hot water, serving the tea, drinking the tea, and even eating the dessert ("okashi" in Japanese; it refers to any small sweet snack and is such a lovely word. ;)).

The rest of my day should be fun, provided I'm feeling better. Tonight I'm playing 42 with people (its popularity is spreading!), then we're going out to a bar for my roommate's 21st birthday. Considering I've never been to a bar, this will be an experience in more ways than one. XD The drinking age in Japan is 20, so turning 21 isn't as big of a deal here but she intends to celebrate like crazy anyway. :) I think it will be fun.

Happy Friday! (or, at least, Happy Almost Friday.) Enjoy your weekend. :)