Sensational sashimi
by Blogie on 13 Dec 2007 {Recipe}
Early this year, I had a gastronomic experience that made me say, ‘I could die now!’ But I’m not gonna die just yet… so it means I’m in trouble. See, from now on, I don’t think I could ever have sashimi again… unless it’s Class A tuna.
At a Japanese home, I was served Class A kihada maguro (yellow-fin tuna) — this is what is exported to Japan and sold for loads of moolah per kilo. It’s the kind of sashimi-grade tuna that’s sweet and oh-so-fresh it feels like angels caressing your palate.
My sometime client, Nakamura-san, he prepared tuna belly sashimi and tuna senaka (back) sashimi — the latter is wa-a-ay better (but I gorged myself on the former just as much). Dipped in shoyu and lightly powdered with fresh wasabi… to die for! And I’m talking about wasabi daikon that’s still in its vegetable form — Nakamura-san just grated the horse radish, and voila! the real thing. This was my first time to have honmono no wasabi, and I tell you, it’s worlds apart from the packaged stuff. For us, it’s just like the difference between using gata that’s freshly-extracted from coconuts, and instant gata. Another Japanese, Yano-san, had me try the daikon leaf off of the vegetable, and it was wonderful! The taste was so unlike anything I’ve ever had before. Very refreshing in the mouth.
The place was simple, not at all ostentatious, but the cooking was fantastic! The sashimi tasted so subtly and yet slightly sweet it boggled the mind. (Now I understood why my friend, Azuhata-san, burst into tears when he tasted this kind of sashimi here in Davao, after being away from Japan so long.) The sushi as well was sugoi oishii!! Yano-san had brought sushi rice from Japan, and OMG!, the way Nakamura-san cooked it? no need to dip the sushi in Kikkoman at all. And for contrast, we had tako (octopus) sashimi as well — very smooth and soft. I guess it had been stripped of its tough outer membrane, just like how my pop prepares kinilaw na pusit.
That was just for appetizers. Main course was kamameshi and — Yano-san’s idea — green papaya tenpura bacon maki, or: flash-fried young papaya in batter and wrapped in bacon. I didn’t think it would fly, but it did with flying colors!! And the kamameshi, also using sushi rice, it was just heavenly.
Then we had more of the sushi maki. It’s called gunkan maki, topped with mashed avocado (and mixed with something that Nakamura-san just won’t share with me). Sprinkled with wasabi and dipped oh-so-slightly in shoyu… you’d forget your name! The Japanese guys loved it. But when Nakamura-san served the sushi maki topped with sliced avocado, I got to like that better. The nori’s taste, mixing with the subtle avocado flavor, and the tinge of soy sauce, and all of those brought together by the soft, chewy sushi rice… it was ecstasy!
Just how am I supposed to enjoy local Japanese fare now??
[This is a repost (with some editing) from Blogie Blog. I’m eventually going to transfer some of my better and food-related posts from my other blogs to this one.]
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on 12 Dec 2007 at 11:32 pm 1) Winston said …
wow…i love japanese food. sa japan ko lang na-appreciate japanese food. hmmm…medyo magkalayo ang jap food dito eh at dun sa jap. there’s a distinction.
on 13 Dec 2007 at 4:20 am 2) faust said …
ahh!!!… japanese food i like. where can i find this? best served with kikkoman soy sauce with wasabi.. heheh lami kaayo na.. goodness. i cant help myself drooling over it.. mouth watering indeed. BLOGIE help me im starving.. hehehe
on 13 Dec 2007 at 4:21 am 3) faust said …
can we find this in davao city?