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jueves, 31 de agosto de 2023

Akashiyaki: A regional dumpling with a fascinating backstory

https://ift.tt/pozLDlc Oona McGee

Osaka might be famous for takoyaki, but Akashi is the place where octopus balls first started.

It’s been around 10 years since our reporter K. Masami first ate Akashiyaki, when she ordered it from a takoyaki store. Back then, she thought it was an interesting alternative to the more famous Osaka specialty, takoyaki (fried octopus balls), with dashi soup stock used to flavour the balls instead of a rich sauce.

However, when she found herself in the city of Akashi — the birthplace of Akashiyaki — in Hyogo Prefecture the other day, she realised there was a whole lot more to the humble dumplings that she never knew about before.

▼ Her first revelation came when she was looking for a place to try it in Uo no Tana (literally “Fish Shelf”), a market outside the station that has a history stretching back 400 years.

As she entered the market, she expected to see posters proudly extolling the virtues of Akashiyaki and stall owners calling to out-of-towners like herself to try it. After all, this dumpling takes its very name from the city, so she thought there would be advertising for it everywhere.

However, as she walked by the many stalls, she began to realise something. There were no signs for “Akashiyaki” anywhere. What she did find were a number of  purveyors advertising “Tamagoyaki” on storefront signs. Tamagoyaki literally translates as “fried egg” but is usually the term used for a Japanese rolled omelette, a dish that isn’t particularly famous in the area, so Masami couldn’t quite work out what was going on.

▼ Stores with the word “玉子焼き” (“Tamagoyaki”) on their signs could be found throughout the area.

Coastal Akashi is famous for octopus, and as she browsed the storefronts Masami could see fresh examples for sale everywhere. However, Masami wasn’t here for fresh octopus, she was here for dumplings that contained octopus, cooked up like takoyaki, in rectangular pans with holes, like this one seen above one of the stalls.

When she saw the familiar pan on the awning of the store above, she thought she’d finally found Akashiyaki, but a closer look at the sign revealed the words “明石玉子焼” (“Akashi Tamagoyaki”). Standing in front of the stall for a moment, Masami’s mind began whirring and equations floated around her head like she was some kind of meme as she worked to put the pieces of the puzzle together, using the visual clues that lay before her.

“A pan for Akashiyaki…but the words ‘Tamagoyaki’ yet again…could this mean…?”

She may have been slow on the uptake, but Masami now realised she must be on to something. Confirming her hunch with a quick search online, Masami clicked her fingers in delight as she finally solved the puzzle — here in Akashi, the dumplings aren’t called Akashiyaki, they’re called…Tamagoyaki!

With the puzzle now solved, Masami lined up at what looked to be the most popular joint, a store called “Takoiso” (“たこ磯”), which bore a sign that read, “Akashi’s famous specialty, Tamagoyaki“.

It was now past noon and the restaurant was already full, with a line of people queuing outside, many of whom looked to be local regulars. The menu was very simple, but in addition to the standard dumplings, containing only octopus, Masami saw there was also a variety containing a mix of octopus and conger eel, so she decided to order that option.

▼ For 1,100 yen (US$7.51), Masami received 15 dumplings, and they were beautifully served on a long plate.

This would be her first time in a decade to try Akashiyaki, and when she held one of them in her chopsticks, she could feel it was super soft and fluffy, so she loosened her grip slightly to ensure it didn’t break.

Unlike takoyaki, which are covered in seaweed laver, mayonnaise and a dark and rich sweet and salty sauce, Akashiyaki are served plain, with customers dipping each ball into dashi soup stock. Once Masami had dipped her ball into the stock, she placed it in her mouth and it felt as if the morsel melted away on her tongue immediately. It was much more soft and delicate compared to takoyaki — so much so that it was like an entirely different dish.

The fried balls themselves were soft, but the dashi softened them even further, creating heavenly, pillowy flavours of octopus and conger eel. Although the seafood flavours were pronounced, the dashi broth was mild, making them incredibly easy to eat.

As she ate her way through each delicious fried ball, she did a little research on her phone and was surprised to find that Akashiyaki was actually the predecessor to takoyaki, with Osaka having nabbed the idea for their fried octopus balls after seeing the popularity of the octopus balls in Akashi.

Akashiyaki were first made in the Meiji period (1868-1912) as a way to make use of egg yolks, which were going to waste during local production of Akashidama, a decorative coral that required egg whites. The dumplings were popularised by a stall holder in Akashi in 1919, followed by the introduction of takoyaki by a purveyor in Osaka in 1935. Although Akashi’s dumplings were long known as “Tamagoyaki” since their inception, a city official renamed them as Akashiyaki in the late ’80s as a way to promote the city.

▼ Whether you know them as Tamagoyaki or Akashiyaki, one thing is for certain — they’re absolutely delicious, and definitely worth trying.

So if you ever find yourself in Hyogo Prefecture, you might want to swing by Akashi for a taste of the balls that started the worldwide craze for octopus balls. Just remember, while some places in Osaka also sell them, under the name “Akashiyaki”, in Akashi, they’re known as “Tamagoyaki”. It’s one of the many charms of Hyogo Prefecture, which is also home to a castle town with one of the country’s best breakfasts.

Images © SoraNews24
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Three Final Fantasy XIV whiskeys are on the way, with cool nods to the game’s starter cities

https://ift.tt/948pQxK Casey Baseel

Show your Eorzean hometown pride by raising a glass to Ul’dah, Gridania, or Limsa Lominsa.

Usually when we talk about a video game celebrating its 10th anniversary, it just means that 10 years have passed since it was released. And while that’s true of Final Fantasy XIV’s 10th anniversary, which it’s celebrating this month, there’s an extra layer of impressive significance to the milestone, because Square Enix’s online multiplayer RPG still has an immensely large and active player base, even a decade later.

It’s an accomplishment well worth raising a glass to, and so to fill that glass there’s a lineup of three different Final Fantasy XIV whiskeys on the way from Japan’s Nagahama Roman Beer Company. And no, it’s not just the beautiful packaging that sets them apart, as each is its own separate spirit, inspired by the three starting cities players can choose from when starting their adventure in Final Fantasy XIV’s continent of Eorzea.

First, we have the Final Fantasy XIV Amahagan Edition Ul’dah, representing the desert metropolis. Ul’dah’s status as crossroads of trade routes where both economic and cultural exchange takes place is represented by its whiskey being a blended whiskey with its components aged in wine and sherry barrels for a complex and luxurious flavor.

Next we move to Gridania, which stands in the middle of a dense, sprawling forest. Its unblended whiskey is crafted to accent woody, leafy, and smoky notes, so that sipping it feels like a wandering walk among the trees.

Finally, we have the port town of Limsa Lominsa. While Ul’dah and Gridania’s whiskeys are malt whiskeys, the Limsa Lominsa is a grain whiskey (though all three do contain English malt). Limsa Lominsa is a port town, and its whiskey’s peaty character is meant to evoke thoughts of the sea breeze with a sweet, mellow finish. Of course, like any proper seafaring community in a fantasy RPG, Limsa Lominsa has a large pirate population, which is reflected in its whiskey being aged in rum barrels.

The three whiskeys are identically priced at 8,000 yen (US$55) per 700 milliliter (23.7-ounce) bottle. They’re scheduled to go on sale in Japan on October 10, but will also be offered as part of Tokyo department store Isetan’s Final Fantasy XIV x Isetan-A Decade’s Journey event to be held at the Shinjuku Isetan from September 28 to October 2. The whiskeys will also be available for purchase through Isetan’s online Moo:d Mark by Isetan online shop starting at 11 a.m. on September 28.

Related: Final Fantasy XIV x Isetan-A Decade’s Journey website, Moo:d Mark
Source: Nagahama Roman Beer Company via Otakomu
Images: Nagahama Roman Beer Company
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Osaka hotel reveals the top five things guests leave behind in their rooms

https://ift.tt/DTWlBE9 Oona McGee

This checklist will save you from forgetting some common items.

Hotel B Suites in Osaka has been attracting attention in Japan recently, with a series of quick, informative TikTok videos designed to help hotel guests during their stay. Their latest video introduces viewers to the top five items guests leave behind in their rooms, and it’s a list that we can all learn from, as it shows just how easy it can be to forget valuable belongings, especially when we’re in a rush to check out on time.

▼ Take a look at the video below!

@b_suites.official

いつもホテルを出てから忘れ物に気付く人🙋 #hotelbsuites #なんばホテル #大阪ホテル

♬ オリジナル楽曲 – HOTEL B Suites/ホテルビースイーツ – HOTEL B Suites/ホテルビースイーツ

The clip presents the most commonly forgotten items in order from second to fifth rankings and finishes with the item that tops the list. In order from least to most common, the items listed are as follows:

5. Fashion accessories (アクセッサリー [akusessarii])

4. Chargers (充電器 [juudenki])

3. Clothes (服 [fuku])

2. Makeup (化粧品 [keshouhin])

1. Food (食品 [shokuhin])

As the video shows, the items left behind range from the very small to the rather large, with things like makeup easily covered by towels in the bathroom and accessories overlooked on the ledge by the bed.

Chargers are so often used that they’re easily left behind as if they’re part of the furniture, and perishables in the fridge can be a case of out of sight out of mind. Perhaps one of the most surprising of the forgotten items is clothes, given that the ones not in your case are meant to be on your body when you leave the room. However, with hotels well-heated in winter it can be easy to leave coats on the rack or in the cupboard so it’s best to double check those areas before leaving.

While it might seem like a no-brainer to do a final sweep of the room for forgotten items on your way out, a checklist like this helps to eliminate the guesswork and give us concrete points, and places, to keep an extra close eye on. So next time you’re about to close the door of your hotel room for the final time, you might want to keep these points in mind. And if you want to leave a good impression on your hosts, here are five things that’ll make you a great guest!

Featured image: Pakutaso
Source: TikTok/b_suites.official via Net Lab

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Burger King adds a sweet potato pie to its menu in Japan for a limited time

https://ift.tt/fqpkN4x Oona McGee

This isn’t just any sweet potato pie — it’s My Sweet Potato Pie!

In recent years, Burger King has been making a mark in Japan with a series of hot dessert pies, known as the “Watakushi no” series. “Watakushi no ” is a polite way of saying “My”, giving these pies a classy air that matches the esteemed quality of the ingredients used in the fillings.

Now, as summer turns to autumn in Japan, there’s a new pie on the menu for a limited time, and this time it’s called the Watakushi no Sweet Imo Pie, or My Sweet Potato Pie.

Sweet potatoes are synonymous with autumn in Japan, and commonly used as an ingredient in seasonal sweets. There are a wide range of varieties available, though, and Burger King has chosen to use Naruto Kintoki, a famous sweet potato variety from Tokushima Prefecture, as the star ingredient.

This particular variety is said to have an elegant sweetness and light, fluffy texture that pairs perfectly with the crispy crust of the pie. As a surprise twist, there are a couple of “secret ingredients” in the mix, one being the addition of cardamom, which “adds an exotic aroma to the dish”. Blended into the pie crust is coffee, which brings a slightly bitter taste to the proceedings, contrasting with the sweetness to create an elegant flavour that’ll appeal to adult palates.

As is often the case with the Watakushi no Pie releases, this new variety will be on the menu at a discounted price of 220 yen (US$1.51) for the first week of 1-7 September. After that, the price will jump to 240 yen for the remainder of the sales period, which will run for a limited but unspecified time.

It’s a good incentive to encourage first-timers to waste no time in trying the Watakushi no Pie, but we’ll need no convincing when it goes on sale on the first day of September. Compared to the chain’s mammoth One Pounder burgers, these pies look like they’ll be incredibly easy to eat!

Source, images: PR Times
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First-ever live-action Pokémon-themed TV drama on the way with former idol singer starring

https://ift.tt/hXbtswm Casey Baseel

Series follows small town girl struggling in the big city and finding strength through rekindled love of playing original Pokémon Game Boy game.

There have been a bunch of live-action adaptations of anime and video game franchises in recent years. So with the announcement from TV Tokyo, the same channel that airs the Pokémon anime series, that it’s going to be airing the first-ever Pokémon-themed weekly live-action TV drama, you might expect a retelling of the first arc of Satoshi/Ash’s journey to become a Pokémon master, or maybe some sort of follow-up to the live-action Detective Pikachu movie.

Instead, though, TV Tokyo is going for a much more rooted-in-reality storyline for Stuff Your Pockets Full of Dreams (or Pocket ni Bouken wo Tsumekonde, in Japanese), whose main character is a woman living in real-world Tokyo, rediscovering her love of playing Pokémon, and seeing how it changes her life.

Nanase Nishino, idol-singer-turned actress and former member of Nogizaka46, will portray protagonist Madoka Akagi, a woman who quits her job at a small town fish sausage maker to move to Tokyo and follow her dream of working in a more creative field by joining an ad agency named ADventure. The transition to big city life doesn’t go smoothly for Madoka, but as she’s struggling to make things work, she receives a care package in the mail from her mom, and inside is her Game Boy Pocket from when she was a kid, plus her old copy of Pokémon Red, the very first Pokémon game that came out back in 1996. She fires it up and starts playing Pokémon for the first time in 20 years, which starts to change how she thinks about her situation.

There’s a bit of wordplay mixed in with the series too. Not only does the “Aka” part of Madoka’s family name Akagi, mean “red,” she hails from the fictional Japanese town of Masara, which is also the name used in Japanese for Pokémon Red’s Pallet Town starting area.

Nishino herself is a Pokémon gamer, and without the long break from the series that her character has. She says she’s played “almost every” Pokémon game, from the original all the way up to the latest releases in the franchise. “As someone from the generation that went from kids to adults while playing Pokémon, I’m filled with joy [to be a part of this series],” the 29-year-old Nishino commented.

Stuff Your Pockets Full of Dreams is scheduled to air on Thursdays at 12:30 a.m. (essentially in the Wednesday late-night section of the schedule), with its premier slated for October 20.

Source: TV Tokyo via Otakomu
Images: TV Tokyo
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miércoles, 30 de agosto de 2023

Lotteria celebrates moon-viewing season with four deliciously eggy, limited-edition sandwiches

https://ift.tt/8OTIVC7 Dale Roll

Four brand new sandwiches with an egg and one of two tasty new sauces? Sign us up!

As we transition from summer to fall and August turns to September, we begin to enter the season of moon-viewing, called “tsukimi” in Japanese. So called because September is the best time of year for moon viewing, with clear skies, mild nights, and (traditionally) the harvest being over, moon-viewing season is often celebrated by businesses with images of the moon.

Of course, for restaurants that means using lots of sunny-side up eggs–because what could be a more perfect edible representation of a full moon? As such, fried eggs are added to dishes, including, for example, fast-food chain Lotteria’s four brand new, limited-time-only tsukimi sandwiches.

Three of them are dressed with a Japanese-style ginger soy sauce, which has a fragrant aroma and a faint hint of spice to it. The ginger used in the sauce is domestically grown, and two different soy sauces, a rich tamari soy sauce and regular dark soy sauce, were combined with the mild sweetness of brown sugar and oyster sauce, the secret ingredient, to make a tasty, special Japanese-style sauce with a punch.

It’ll be used on the Sunny-side-up Tsukimi Japanese-style Exquisite Cheeseburger (Hanjuku Tsukimi Wafuu Zeppin Cheese Burger) (570 yen [US$3.90] or 1,010 yen for a set). This sandwich also comes with a burger patty eight millimeters (1/3 inch) thick, seasoned simply with salt, pepper, and oregano, topped with Gouda, cheddar cheese, a sunny-side up fried egg, and, finally, the special Japanese-style Ginger Soy Sauce.

The Sunny-side-up Tsukimi Japanese-style Shrimp Burger (Hanjuku Tsukimi Wafuu Ebi Burger) (550 yen on its own or 990 yen for a set) also comes with the original ginger soy sauce, but instead of a burger patty, its main attraction is a thick and crispy deep friend shrimp patty, made with plump whole shrimp. It also has an egg and Lotteria’s original, hand-mixed tartar sauce, as well as shredded cabbage for some extra crunch.

The last sandwich to use the original ginger soy sauce will allow you to enjoy the simple pleasure of a Japanese-style hamburger. The Sunny-side-up Tsukimi Japanese-style Teriyaki Burger (Hanjuku Tsukimi Wafuu Teriyaki Burger) (490 yen on its own or 930 yen for a set) is a classic hamburger simply dressed with the special sauce, a sunny-side-up egg, lettuce, mayonnaise, and mustard, so you can really appreciate the sweet, salty, and spicy sauce.

But wait, there’s more! There’s a fourth Tsukimi burger coming, and unlike its fellows, it’s dressed with Sriracha sauce to give it a spicy kick. The Sunny-side-up Tsukimi Spicy Umami Exquisite Cheese Burger (Hanjuku Tsukimi Wafuu Umakara Zeppin Cheese Burger) (590 yen on its own or 1,030 yen for a set) may be different from the other three, but that doesn’t mean it deserves any less appreciation. Like the Japanese-style Exquisite Cheese Burger, it comes with both Gouda and cheddar cheese, as well as a sunny-side-up egg, all sandwiched in a soft, fluffy bun and dressed with one of the world’s most beloved hot sauces, Sriracha.

All four burgers will be available at Lotteria branches around the country starting on September 7 until the middle of October, so definitely pop by a branch if you want to try them. And for more Tsukimi fare, check out KFC’s Tsukimi sandwiches, plus their two surprise debuts this year!

Source: Press Release, Lotteria
Images: Press Release, Lotteria

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Yoshinoya tries its hand at French food with new beef miroton, but is it any good?

https://ift.tt/anKpSwg SoraNews24

Yoshinoya knows beef, but do they know what they’re doing with this French home-cooking staple?

With Yoshinoya being Japan’s most popular beef bowl joint, the chain has a lot of branches in Tokyo. Our Japanese-language reporter Seiji Nakazawa walks past multiple Yoshinoya restaurants a day, so many that they sometimes just kind of blend into the rest of the city’s scenery.

But the Yoshinoya in Tokyo’s Ogawacho neighborhood stood out and quickly caught his eye on a recent afternoon, because it was advertising a dish that Seiji had never seen offered by Yoshinoya before, and what’s more, it was already on sale.

“Miroton” says the katakana script on the poster, referring to beef miroton. This isn’t a Japanese dish, though, but rather a type of traditional French cuisine. Originally developed as a way for home chefs to make use of leftover meat, in orthodox beef miroton the beef is cooked for a second time with vegetables in a stock of tomato and vinegar.

Seiji had never eaten, or even heard of, the dish, but given Yoshinoya’s excellent track record with beef bowls, he decided to give their beef miroton a shot. So he stepped into the restaurant, took a seat, and ordered a plate for 657 yen (US$4.50).

Taking a look at it, his first thought was that it looked kind of like curry, but with a color more red than brown. Along with beef and sliced onion, there were also sliced pickles in the mix, which was served with white rice.

The consistency of the sauce was smooth, but not as thick as curry roux. Taking a bite, the red color turned out to be foreshadowing for a strong tomato flavor with pronounced tartness. This gave way to a clean, refreshing finish that hit the spot on a hot summer day.

According to Yoshinoya, they decided to start serving beef miroton based on the popularity of their Hayashi rice. Hayashi rice is a Japanese dish with a red wine/tomato demi-glace sauce that people in Japan have been enjoying for generations. While Hayashi rice isn’t always on the menu at Yoshinoya, whenever it comes back for a stint it’s a big seller, and with the similarities to beef miroton, Yoshinoya wants to see if the French dish will be as warmly welcomed.

▼ The poster even calls beef miroton “France’s Hayashi rice.”

With this being Seiji’s first-ever experience with beef miroton, Seiji can’t comment on how authentic it is, or how it stacks up flavor-wise against beef miroton in France. Judged on its own merits, though, he thinks it’s great, and could easily see himself ordering it regularly when he’s eating at Yoshinoya.

However, right now Yoshinoya’s beef miroton is still in its testing stage, available at less than two dozen branches in east Japan and only for a limited time, which explains why Seiji hadn’t noticed it on the menu at other Yoshinoya locations. The company doesn’t appear to have put out a complete list of participating branches, but the one that Seiji found it at isn’t far from Akihabara and Kanda Stations, two parts of Tokyo that Seiji spends a lot of time in. Beef miroton is scheduled to be on the menu until mid-September, after which Yoshinoya will decide whether or not to expand its availability based on customer reactions during the test period.

Restaurant information
Yoshinoya (Ogawamachi branch)/ 吉野家(小川町店)
Address: Tokyo-to, Chiyoda-ku, Kanda Ogawamachi 2-2
東京都千代田区神田小川町2丁目2
Open 4 a.m.-2 a.m.
Website

Photos © SoraNews24
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Tsukimi burger season heats up as McDonald’s Japan unveils new moon-viewing burger lineup【Pics】

https://ift.tt/9hB0XlZ Casey Baseel

Burgers and sweets to enjoy as you look up at the night sky this autumn.

Tsukimi, or moon-viewing, is one of Japan’s most elegant cultural traditions. Most widely enjoyed on the night of the full moon in September, a classical tsukimi gathering consists of gazing up at the brightly shining celestial body, nibbling on some sweets, and reciting poetry.

However, tsukimi season has become a time of intense competition between Japan’s fast food chains. “Tsukimi” is also used to describe a bowl of noodles with an egg dropped in, because of how the egg resembles the shape and color of a full moon as it cooks in the broth. In recent years, this has given rise to tsukimi burgers, hamburgers and other sandwiches that include a fried or steamed egg, which fast food restaurants in Japan serve as special seasonal menu items in autumn. So now, just a few days after rival KFC did likewise, McDonald’s Japan has announced its new tsukimi burger and sweets lineup for 2023.

New to the Tsukimi Family, as McDonald’s is calling the lineup, is the Shichimi Kaoru Gyusuki Tsukimi, or “Scent of Shichimi Beef Sukiyaki Tsukimi” burger. In addition to steamed egg, a beef patty, and cheese, you also get a decadent slice of bacon and, right on top of the bottom bun, a spread of sukiyaki-style simmered beef, with its sweet notes accompanied by the flavor of shichimi, a spicy Japanese condiment mix that includes chili and black pepper. There’s also a special tomato cream sauce to make this feel more special than plain old ketchup would.

On the other hand, if you want something a little simpler, McDonald’s is also bringing back the standard Tsukimi burger and Tsukimi Cheese, which make use of the tomato cream sauce too. They’re also a little more wallet-friendly than the deluxe 520-yen (US$3.55) Gyusuki Tsukimi, with the regular Tsukimi at 420 yen and the Tsukimi Cheese at 450.

There’s even a Tsukimi McMuffin (380 yen) that’s offered until 10:30 a.m., if you want to get your moon-viewing-themed meal in before noon.

Remember how we said sweets are part of a traditional moon-viewing party? You can satisfy that aspect with the Tsukimi Pie (180 yen), which is filled with anko (sweet red bean paste) and mochi, two things that go great together when they’re both hot and gooey.

▼ Though because this is mochi, McDonald’s does caution you to chew it thoroughly before swallowing, for your own safety.

Rounding out the Tsukimi Family are the Tsukimi Nagano Shine Muscat McShake (190 yen) and the Chicken McNuggets with Yuzu Kosho Mayo Sauce (240 yen). Honestly, these seem like maybe they’ve been adopted into the family, as neither of those ingredients are necessarily associated with moon-viewing. That said, the use of juice from Nagano-raised Shine Muscat grapes, one of the most deliciously sweet grape varieties in Japan, promises to make the shake a uniquely tasty treat, and yuzo kosho, a citrus chili paste, has long been a popular accent for grilled yakitori chicken skewers in Japan, so it should work well with chicken nuggets too.

▼ The Tsukimi Shake cup does at least have a picture of the moon and a pair of rabbits, which are commonly associated with the moon in Japanese folklore.

Another part of McDonald’s modern tsukimi tradition is the debut of a new tear-jerker commercial about a daughter and her father bonding over a shared tsukimi burger meal. This year’s iteration has a young woman working in an anime studio being paid a late-night visit by Dad, who’s aware that she’s a grown-up who can take care of herself, but still wants to do what he can for her.

▼ Set to J-pop singer Ayaka’s “Mikazuki” (“Cresent Moon”), it’s a video that’ll have you saying, “I should give my parents a call…right after I get a burger.”

McDonald’s Tsukimi Family goes on sale on September 6 and will be available for a limited time. With both McDonald’s and KFC having shown their hands, maybe next we’ll see the return of competitor Mos Burger’s Sailor Moon tsukimi sandwich.

Source: McDonald’s Japan via IT Media
Images: McDonald’s Japan
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Japanese convenience store apologizes for putting Meatballs in meatball packages, issues recall

https://ift.tt/hY2ktOm Casey Baseel

Family Mart wants to make amends for simple yet linguistically complex mistake.

On Monday, Japanese convenience store chain Family Mart issued an apology regarding one of its products. For any company in the food industry, there’s nothing more important than customer trust, and so Family Mart wanted to apologize for a mistake in which packages of meatballs which were sold to customers actually contained Meatballs.

OK, so this food recall notice comes with a side order of linguistics. In Japanese, the word for “meat” is niku. Meanwhile, dango refers to a ball-shaped dumpling or other edible morsel. Put them together, and you get nikudango, which translates as “meatball.” So if you walk into a Family Mart and buy a pack of their Chinese-style nikudango, you wouldn’t be surprised when you open the pack and it contains balls of meat, as shown in the photo below.

So some people were left scratching their heads when Family Mart issued a statement that it’s recalling a number of packs of those nikudango that were sold last weekend because instead of nikudango, they had “Meatballs” inside. See, in addition to nikudango, Family Mart also sells a product officially called, in Japanese, Mito Boru, the Japanese corrupted pronunciation of the English loanword “meatball.”

Family Mart’s statement includes:

“We deeply apologize for the great trouble this has caused our customers, and will be expanding our management efforts and coordination with suppliers to prevent such a thing from happening again.”

While a sincere apology is almost always appreciated in Japan, this situation left more than a few scratching their heads, but there is a legitimate problem Family Mart is addressing. Though nikudango and meatball/mito boru do both technically refer to the same thing, they tend to get used for different purposes within the food industry and foodie circles.

As a Japanese word, nikudango is usually used when talking about meatballs used with traditional Asian seasonings/in Asian cuisine. So, for example, the meatballs that are popular at Chinese restaurants in Japan are generally called nikudango, not “meatballs.” On the other hand, meatballs with/for Western seasonings/dishes usually get called mito boru/meatballs.

▼ The Japanese company that makes these calls them nikudango

▼ …while the restaurant in Japan that makes these calls them meatballs.

It’s a little like how some restaurants in the U.S. will use the term “wrap” instead of “burrito” if their tortilla-wrapped menu items don’t contain other traditional Mexican foodstuffs; not a hard-and-fast rule or requirement, but more about conveying what sort of flavors/ingredients the customer can expect.

In Family Mart’s case, its nikudango has a sweet-and-sour sauce-style glaze as indicated by the product’s full name, Famimaru Kitchen Special Sweet Vinegar Chinese-style Niku Dango. The Meat Balls, on the other hand, are the Tomato Sauce Meatballs. It’s unclear if the meat mixture is identical between the two products, but at the very least their sauces taste very different from one another. There’s also the matter of price and quantity, with the nikudango pack being 158 grams (5.6 ounces) and 221 yen (US$1.50), and the Meatballs 110 grams for 119 yen, making the nikudango about 30 percent more expensive per gram, which means the customers who received Meatballs by mistake were being overcharged. On the bright side, there seems to be no product safety issue here. Though mislabeled as nikudango, the Meatballs aren’t defective or unsanitary in any way, and Family Mart says there’s no difference in potential allergens contained between its nikudango and Meatballs.

Anyone who purchased the item in question (which has an expiration date of October 2) can bring either the package or the receipt to a Family Mart branch and receive a full refund, which effectively makes this a case of people who’ve already eaten theirs getting a free sample of Family Mart Meatballs, and if you like nikudango enough to be shopping for them, you’d probably enjoy “meatballs” too. In the end, to most people who were affected it’s probably not the “great trouble” Family Mart is worried it might have been, but it’s a good call to correct your mistakes when you can, like when the Pokémon Center apologized for writing model Nicole Fujita’s name as Nicole Fujita.

Source: Family Mart via IT Media
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Insert images: Family Mart, SoraNews24
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Lawson Store 100 releases retro line of Japanese convenience store foods

https://ift.tt/Ffx0RzH Master Blaster

Let’s take it back to ’79, give or take a decade.

The food at convenience stores is constantly evolving. But evolution is such a slow process that sometimes the change is hard to perceive unless you take a look back every once in a while. And here to do just that is the discount offshoot of Lawson convenience stores Lawson Store 100 and their limited lineup of Showa Retro Fair foods.

▼ You can tell a Lawson Store 100 from its green signs

The Showa era of Japan technically ran from 1926 to 1989, but many people tend to focus on the latter part of it, which ran through the ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s when looking at things like fashion, culture, and music. Now, we can get a taste of that time too, through one or all of these delightfully primitive-looking meals and snacks.

Throwback Hayashi Rice

There was a time when carefully embedding peas into a thick demi-glace sauce was the epitome of class. Now, that spirit is alive again in this bento that combines this rice-and-sauce dish which also contains loads of beef, onions, carrots, and mushrooms beneath the surface, all for 370 yen (US$2.53).

Pilaf Onigiri

There was a time when pilaf was considered superior to frying when it comes to cooking seasoned rice. That time is now again thanks to this rice puck for 100 yen ($0.68) filled with diced bacon, carrot, onion, and red pepper.

Ginger Pork Onigiri

Thin cuts of pork cooked in a rich ginger sauce have definitely stood the test of time in Japanese cuisine, but it was way back in Showa when this delectable meat really took off. The rice of this ball is flavored with soy sauce and wrapped in small cuts of grilled pork flavored with ginger and mayonnaise for 138 yen ($0.94).

Throwback Showa Retro Bento

This lunch box is a full-on assault of foods with shades of Showa in them. Lawson Store 100 wondered what foods would most bring people back to that bygone age and filled the container with rice and salmon garnished with the holy trinity of a pickled ume, pickled daikon, and kelp, all for 248 yen ($1.69).

Thick Fried Egg Sandwich

At a price of 288 yen ($1.97) don’t let the appearance of this simple Showa staple of diners fool you. Inside that thick patty of egg is a wonderland of rich flavoring with some mayo and mustard to drive the taste home.

Agepan

This sugary treat selling for 110 yen ($0.75) was the envy of all school lunch desserts. Its name literally means “fried bread” which would be a “donut” in lay terms for people so lay that “fried bread” wouldn’t suffice.

Twist Sandwich (Apricot Jam)

The retro koppepan craze – in which simple, soft rolls not unlike hotdog buns are sold with a jam or cream filling for a cheap and easy snack – has been well underway in Japan for a while now. But only Lawson’s 110-yen ($0.75) jam sandwiches dare to ask the question: “Hey, remember when the bread used to be all twisty too?”

The products listed above all went on sale from 30 August, but they are hardly the end of what’s in store at Lawson Store 100. Starting 9 September, the following two additional items to the Showa Retro Fair will be made.

Omurice & Napolitan

Going to any Showa-era kissaten coffee shop, you’d be sure to find the stalwarts of omurice and Napolitan spaghetti on the menu, but which one do you choose? Lawson Store 100 asks, why not both? For 350 yen ($2.39) you can have your omurice and eat your Napolitan too. It’s a match made in ketchup heaven.

Ginger Pork & Napolitan Sandwiches

Lawson Store 100 doesn’t stop asking questions there, either. For their next trick they wonder what if the two Showa signature dishes of ginger pork and Napolitan were served in sandwiches for 230 yen ($1.57).

It’s certainly a lot of Showa-stylized foods on display but that isn’t even everything. Lawson Store 100 will also offer a range of retro candies, snacks, and instant noodles in their stores and they’ll even be playing hits from the era while the Showa Retro Fair is underway until 12 September.

So, slap on your punch perm and head down to your nearest location while the past is still alive and savory!

Source: Lawson Store 100, PR Times
Images: PR Times
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