By Sourish Bhattacharyya
AFTER TESTING the waters with the
Taste Japan food promotion last year at three Godrej Nature’s Basket stores in
New Delhi, Mumbai and Hyderabad, Japan’s Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and
Fisheries (MAFF) is all set to roll out the Japanese Food Season on Sunday.
The multi-event, two-city programme,
also named Oishii (or Tasty) Japan, will take off with the Japanese Restaurant
Season, which will see 11 establishments in Delhi and Mumbai offering set menus
at prices ranging from Rs 1,000++ to Rs 3,500++ per person up to November 10.
Price-wise, Delhi seems to have the
more exciting offerings. You could dig Megu’s
Signature Sakura Sushi Platter at The Leela Palace in Chanakyapuri for Rs
3,750++ per head, or go to Lodi Colony Market for Guppy by Ai’s six-course set menu (veg, Rs 1,000++ per person;
non-veg, Rs 1,200++ per person), or check out Ambience Mall for Sakae Sushi’s elaborate spread, which
is big on rolls, priced at Rs 1,295 per head. Also on offer are the six-course
set menus with the same pricing at Asia7
in Ambience Mall, Gurgaon, and the seven-item menu (veg, Rs 1,199++; non-veg,
Rs 1,299++) at Izikaya, which has
reopened at the Basant Lok Community Centre in Vasant Vihar.
Mumbai’s participating restaurants include
Aoi, Mount Mary Steps, Bandra West, with
a six-course menu (Rs 1,000++) has a sushi platter thrown in (I was tickled by
the pesto maki with bocconcini and cherry tomatoes); Umame, Churchgate, whose offering is rather thin, except for the
Suntory whisky ice-cream, for the Rs 1,500++ tag; Kofuku, Linking Road, Bandra West, which has a six-course menu
priced at Rs 1,000++/Rs 1,200++.
The upper end, price-wise, is represented
by San-Qi at the Four Seasons (four
courses, Rs 3,500++) and India Jones
at The Trident, Nariman Point (three courses plus a glass of sparkling wine, Rs
2,500++). Sushi and More, Cumballa
Hill, Breach Candy, is also on the list, but the event website
(cooljapanfestival.com) repeats the Umame menu in the pop-up for the
restaurant. It’s an off-putting oversight.
The event’s other big highlights will
be the Washoku, a Japanese street
food festival with kaiten (or conveyor
belt) sushi, yakitori, noodles and more selling for Rs 150++ per dish at the
High Street Phoenix in Lower Parel, Mumbai, and an original Japanese recipe
contest in association with BBC GoodFood magazine, the winner of
which will be get to go to Japan. Check out the Facebook page, GoodFood Magazine
India, to find out more about the contest — the last date is November 30.
Japan’s Ambassador Takeshi Yagi formally flagged off the Japanese
Food Season at the embassy in New Delhi on October 17. His press conference was
preceded by a sushi-making master class for students of the Institute of Hotel
Management-Pusa presided over by Junichi
Asano, an instructor at the just-opened Singapore branch of the Tokyo Sushi Academy. Asano, who has spent
15 years presiding over the kitchens at the Japanese embassies in Europe, started
making sushi when he was 20 and he put in the mandatory 10 years before he
earned his certificate to qualify as a sushi chef. Few people know sushi as intimately
as he.
I asked him what it takes to make the
perfect sushi. He said it was rice, though you need just 15gm of it in one
sushi. “Nothing but Japonica sticky rice would do,” Asano said. The other
critical step in the sushi-making process is to add rice vinegar at the right time
to the sushi rice. “Add the vinegar as soon you take the rice out of the
cooker,” he said. “The rice must be hot so that the vinegar seeps into it. It
must be warm when you make the sushi.”
Asano spent his first night in India
sampling Master Chef Yutaka Saito’s menu at The Leela Palace at Chanakyapuri,
New Delhi, and discovered the world of vegetarian sushi. Saito, whose wife is
from Delhi and a committed vegetarian, is the master of Japanese Zen cuisine.
Vegetarian sushi, naturally, are big on his menu.
When I asked Asano about the new
trends in sushi making, he pointed to the use of ingredients such as avocado, asparagus,
vegetable tempura and spicy mayonnaise-based dressings. These ingredients have turned
around the taste of vegetarian sushi. “I have always believed that vegetarian sushi
aren’t interesting, but my dinner at Megu proved me wrong,” Asano said, but he
was quick to add this bit of advice for all aspiring sushi chefs: “Innovative
sushi may be a good way to introduce people to sushi, but you’ve got to learn
the basics first.”
No comments:
Post a Comment