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An afternoon with Harumi Kurihara

September 16, 2009 15 Comments Filed Under: Food, Recipes, Uncategorized

Harumi showing Valentine Warner how to pound sesame seed Japanese style.
We often think of Japanese cooking as complex, alien and difficult. A book ‘Everyday Harumi’ by Japan’s most popular TV chef and cookbook writer Harumi Kurihara, seeks to change that perception.

A lucky few were invited to watch her prepare some of the dishes, easy pickles, fishcakes and sesame beans, in an exquisite Georgian house in Clerkenwell. This cooking school in a home ‘Foodat52′ is a similar concept to home restaurants. The kitchen boasts a nine burner Victorian range cooker, an authentic Fridgidaire, burnished copper pans and beautifully constructed wooden shelving and plate racks made by owner and cabinet maker John Benbow.
Valentine Warner was also in attendance, bending down from a great height to respectfully listen to Harumi’s instructions.
Harumi is a tiny neat woman with a sweet and precise manner. Untrained, her style is ultimately pragmatic. Her food is obviously healthy, she looks at least ten years younger than 63. Overseeing a Martha Stewart style empire in Japan, she designs cookware such as a Japanese version of a pestle and mortar ‘Tsuribachi‘. This has grooves inside, enabling you to gently crack the raw sesame seeds in a circular movement, finally ending in a soft buttery paste quite distinct from Tahini.
The paste, which can also be bought ready made from Japanese shops, is used in soups and dressings. Mixed with Mirin sauce and sugar, it is also good with green beans.
Harumi is flexible though…

“Don’t stick to what I say. In my house, this is the flavour I create. You can express yourself however”

We watch her mix the beans and paste together. “Don’t overdry the beans ” she advises. She speaks in a mixture of Japanese and English. We learn some Japanese words: ‘scochi‘ ‘a little’…‘Oishi’ means delicious.
Presentation is very important in Japanese cuisine: Harumi suggests for instance that we put only one thing on a plate or put only a small amount.
Cutting is also an art: the translator explains that she and Harumi spend much time trying to find English synonyms for all the different Japanese words for cutting.
Harumi makes cucumber pickles by rolling them hard, skins on, in salt; this brings up the colour and gets rid of bitterness. I’ve often salted thinly sliced cucumber to make it crispier. I have never thought of penetrating the skin with salt.
Harumi then ‘tenderises’ the cucumbers by bashing them with the rolling pin. She tears the cucumber in strips; the tearing lends a different texture, adding interest to the dish.
The cucumber strips are marinated in soy sauce, ‘julienned’ ginger, and rice vinegar and at the end, a little toasted sesame oil.
Soy sauce and Mirin are the cornerstone of many of her recipes. Mirin, a sweet liquid with low alcohol, adds a “sweetness and silkiness” to the recipes. It’s pretty essential to buy good Japanese soy sauce as opposed to cheap Chinese soy. It is worth the price difference.
Harumi shows that if it is difficult to get hold of Japanese ingredients, you can adapt. She makes the same sauce with white wine vinegar, “even better” she pronounces.
She leaves the pickles for about six hours explaining that this technique also works well with cherry tomatoes (their skins pricked with a cocktail stick), celery and carrots.
Next we learn to make salmon fishcakes. We mince salmon and a little fresh uncooked prawn very finely with a knife, adding diced raw onion, pepper salt and mirin.
Palming them into little patties, the fishcakes are fried in vegetable oil and served with finely julienned raw ginger strips and Ponzu sauce. These fishcakes are light, not heavy with potato and starch like our fishcakes.
To make Ponzu sauce: you burn the alcohol off some Mirin sauce then simmer for three minutes, the end result a soft sweetness. If you don’t have Mirin, use soy, lemon and sugar. You then add some Kombu seaweed which has had the salty deposits rinsed off to the simmered Mirin. Finally you add soy and lemon juice. It keeps for up to a month in the fridge.
I asked Harumi through her translator if the Japanese still know how to cook traditional dishes, if they are moving towards ready meals. Harumi says there was a period when young Japanese people started to eat takeaways but most Japanese families still know how to cook. There is at present more interest in ‘lunchboxes’ rather than fast food; making your own fresh healthy lunch to ‘takeaway’. Harumi also volunteers teaching young people how to cook traditionally.
When the Japanese want to know how to do home cooking they go to Harumi Kurihara. She makes it look easy. Part of a power couple in Japan, married to a well known TV personality, Harumi’s style is ubiquitous with a hugely successful quarterly food magazine.
At the end one of her team who was videoing the session asked me what I thought of the afternoon… For me it was learning to cook by osmosis, for this is how we all learn to cook, standing next to our mothers and grandmothers, talking and watching. Without even being aware of it, we learn. Being in the graceful presence of Harumi, seeing her handle and cut up food, arrange it artfully but without pretension on a plate was an education in itself.
If you are feeling a little intimidated by Japanese cooking, then I recommend her books as a entry point.
I have a copy of Harumi’s latest book to give away, if you leave a comment and an email address. I will draw winners out of a hat…by the end of September 2009.

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Comments

  1. starro

    September 17, 2009 at 6:47 am

    a great post – and it makes me realise i could at least attemp to cook japanese, something i would not have even dared contemplate in the past. and i'm definitely going out for a japanese tonight!

    Reply
  2. Miss Whiplash

    September 17, 2009 at 7:16 am

    This sounds great – I'd love to be able to go along and see Karumi 🙂
    I really like Japanese food, but sometimes find the making of it a bit daunting – must try to sign up for some classes/demos somewhere – I think it's always easier when you see someone doing it first.

    Reply
  3. The Kitchen Jezebel

    September 17, 2009 at 11:30 am

    I think its very good food to cook, for those on restricted diets, your post makes me all eager to try out some things..thanks..

    Reply
  4. Leslie

    September 17, 2009 at 12:01 pm

    The perfect expression of simple elegance.

    Reply
  5. Charlie

    September 17, 2009 at 12:09 pm

    Looks like a lovely day – would love to learn to cook Japanese food! Am I being stupid though, have only been able to leave my web address, not email?

    Reply
  6. Kanga_Rue

    September 17, 2009 at 12:37 pm

    I always love reading your posts. I actually didn't realise there was a difference between Japanese & Chinese soy sauce… and previously would have substituted – however now I know that white wine vinegar is a better bet! Cheers!

    Reply
  7. Nicisme

    September 17, 2009 at 8:00 pm

    How brilliant, I'd love to have a go at cooking Japanese, and I've really warmed to Valentine Warner.

    Reply
  8. TheFastestIndian

    September 17, 2009 at 8:09 pm

    Ooo- very interesting. I suspect I have only sampled a very small aspect of Japanese cuisine, tempura, ramen, sushi, etc. Would definitely love to learn more about the flavours and ingredients involved, and what goes with what.
    I do buy Kikoman soy sauce though, so guess that's a start….

    Count me in for the cook book comp! I'm ireenable AT gmail.com

    Reply
  9. Helen

    September 20, 2009 at 9:12 pm

    ooh this looks amazing! I really want to learn more about Japanese food – I know I love it but I don't cook it very often. Japan is my number one holiday destination. I have a plan to get there in the next few years.

    Reply
  10. theundergroundrestaurant

    September 20, 2009 at 9:14 pm

    It's been a long held dream of mine to go to Japan. Kikkoman soy sauce is very good.
    The people that haven't left email addresses…um I'm not sure if I'm supposed to use the ones I know or what!

    Reply
  11. Lickedspoon

    September 21, 2009 at 10:51 am

    I had the pleasure of going to a Harumi demo a few years ago and I've cooked from her books quite a lot since. We're so used to restaurant-style Japanese food which is a bit daunting to reproduce in your own kitchen, but her style of Japanese home cooking is really inspirational and, mostly, pretty easy. Thanks so much for visiting my blog.

    Reply
  12. TheFastestIndian

    September 24, 2009 at 9:50 am

    To be honest I think that not leaving an email address indicates a lack of commitment to winning the book, and that these people should not be included in the competition!
    Only joking (in case not obvious) and will leave tricky decisions like that to you!

    Reply
  13. theundergroundrestaurant

    September 27, 2009 at 7:43 am

    I do slightly agree…strange that people do not leave emails…
    Japanese soy sauce is waaay better than cheapo imitations.

    Reply
  14. theundergroundrestaurant

    September 30, 2009 at 2:28 pm

    The fastest Indian wins….

    Reply
  15. TheFastestIndian

    October 2, 2009 at 3:17 pm

    Do I really? Woo hoo!!!!

    Reply

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MsMarmiteLover aka Kerstin Rodgers.

Chef, photographer, author, journalist, blogger. Pioneer of the supperclub movement.

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Kerstin Rodgers/MsMarmiteLover
Apple rose blossom tarts with rose jam. Rose Appl Apple rose blossom tarts with rose jam.  Rose Apple Blossom Tarts

Serves 8

Equipment: 
Microwave
Cupcake or muffin tin

I use a red-skinned apple to make these, to get a hint of blush at the edges of the ‘petals’.

Ingredients:
4 Pink Lady or Royal Gala apples, cored, cut into quarters, sliced thinly into half moons
1 lemon, squeezed
1 pack all butter readymade puff pastry 320g, on a roll, cut into 8 strips about 6 cms long
100g of melted butter
1/2 jar of rose jam
1 or 2 tbsp cinnamon or cardamom, ground 
Pinch maldon salt
2 or 3 tbsp icing sugar

Instructions

Prepare a bowl of acidulated water (cold water with lemon juice) to prevent browning.
Core the apples, and cut them in quarters. Slice thinly into half-moons (a mandolin is useful for this). 
Put them into a large bowl of cold water with the lemon.
Microwave the bowl of sliced apples for 5 minutes until soft enough to bend slightly but not cook them.
Preheat the oven to 180ºC.
Roll out the puff pastry. Divide into 8 sections by cutting the roll into quarters then halving each quarter. You will end up with 8 approximately 6cm strips.
Brush the strip with melted butter then paint with a layer of rose jam. You can then dust with either ground cinnamon or cardamom.
Lay the apple slices along the top of the pastry strip, overlapping them. Fold up the bottom half of the pastry strip to make an pleat with the skin side of the apple half moon poking over the top.
Roll up the folded pastry strips until they look like a rose made of apple at the top
Place ‘rose’ side up, in a buttered cupcake tin
Repeat until all are done and bake for 20 -30 minutes.
Using a tea strainer or small sieve, sprinkle with icing sugar.
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