Sushi Thoughts
19/10/05 18:51I have been having a bad few days; therefore, I have been craving sushi and lapsang souchoung tea. Courtesy of last weekend's expedition to Wallace & Gromit: Curse of the Were-Rabbit with
gaudior,
rushthatspeaks, and
nineweaving--a delightful thing--I have possessed the latter for upwards of a week.
Burnt leaves ghost offerings
Still under glazed mound dust hands
hold cup. No tea comes.
Not, so far, the former.
There is takeout sushi at the cafeteria at work. I eyed it, but I'm not a huge fan of utterly standard sushi fare (california rolls, I feel, are only good when consumed in summer or at Aoi), and though I know that the place that made the sushi is by the fish-market, I don't know how long it took to get from the market to the counter, or how well the truck was refrigerated. And it's pricey, so I've been staying away.
But I attempted something like it. Mango on tuna, wrapped in seaweed, is very decent indeed.
Though it needed tuna that wasn't from a can--something drier, firmer, overall of a better grade--and wouldn't be good with oily fish like eel.
[A note to the uninformed: I cook sporadically and experimentally. Most of the dishes I cook this way are passable, though they would be good with more tweaking (apricot chicken in yogurt sauce). I am proud of the fact that I make quite good soups by putting all the leftovers fit to cook in a crock pot, stirring and adding pepper. A few times--vegetarian borscht ("meat is for the Tsar!"), grilled oshinko (Japanese pickled vegetables), halved red grapes with ground black pepper--the results have been outstanding. This is what happens when one cooks by one's nose: "Does this smell good when I wave it next to this?"]
So, mango and tuna. Something definitely to try again.
Burnt leaves ghost offerings
Still under glazed mound dust hands
hold cup. No tea comes.
Not, so far, the former.
There is takeout sushi at the cafeteria at work. I eyed it, but I'm not a huge fan of utterly standard sushi fare (california rolls, I feel, are only good when consumed in summer or at Aoi), and though I know that the place that made the sushi is by the fish-market, I don't know how long it took to get from the market to the counter, or how well the truck was refrigerated. And it's pricey, so I've been staying away.
But I attempted something like it. Mango on tuna, wrapped in seaweed, is very decent indeed.
Though it needed tuna that wasn't from a can--something drier, firmer, overall of a better grade--and wouldn't be good with oily fish like eel.
[A note to the uninformed: I cook sporadically and experimentally. Most of the dishes I cook this way are passable, though they would be good with more tweaking (apricot chicken in yogurt sauce). I am proud of the fact that I make quite good soups by putting all the leftovers fit to cook in a crock pot, stirring and adding pepper. A few times--vegetarian borscht ("meat is for the Tsar!"), grilled oshinko (Japanese pickled vegetables), halved red grapes with ground black pepper--the results have been outstanding. This is what happens when one cooks by one's nose: "Does this smell good when I wave it next to this?"]
So, mango and tuna. Something definitely to try again.