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The personal log of Peter, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Monday, January 14, 2008

Eating "ekiben" (train station bento) on the Shinkansen

On Sunday I took my son into Tokyo to check out an exhibition on robots at the National Science Museum, where we got to see the famous robot Asimo that can climb stairs and play soccer. We took the opportunity to ride the shinkansen, Japan's famous bullet trains that zip along special elevated rails, which is my all-time favorite way to travel. My son told me he wanted to eat ekiben, the traditional bento boxed lunches that are only sold at train stations. Each Japanese city makes its own unique train station bento lunches, like Masu no Sushi (a round disc of rice with salmon on top that you eat like a pizza) from Toyama on the Sea of Japan, or the famous Kanimeshi (crab meat bento) from Hakodate, Hokkaido. The symbol of the city of Takasaki (where we catch the train) is the Daruma, those round red figures that are displayed in homes and businesses to bring good luck, which are representations of Bodhidharma, a historical figure from India in the 6th century who founded the predecessors to Zen Buddhism and Kung Fu, and who attained his unique round shape by fasting and meditating for so long that his arms and legs disappeared. When it came time to choose which lunch we wanted to eat, we naturally picked Daruma Bento, and ate it in the train as the countryside sped by.

Daruma-ben

4 Comments:

Blogger timo said...

could you please name a few of the items in the bento? not so obvious to my Western eyes. Looks like a piece of fish fillet is in there.

9:07 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

It can be complex. The chicken looking thing in the middle is chicken, with a nice sauce to it but not quite teriyaki (alas, like "Asian Chicken Salad" there's not that much teriyaki in Japan). To the right of that is bamboo sprout. The pink thing on the bottom is a boiled imo, a kind of potato although I'm not sure which. The yellow ball is a chestnut that I didn't eat. Along the left side (the green stuff) are sansai, a kind of naturally growing plant found in the mountains that they harvest and eat. All on rice.

10:36 PM

 
Blogger whiterabbit said...

What happens to the container when you're finished? Do they pick it up, or can you keep it?

2:11 AM

 
Blogger Kay said...

the bento box comes along with the food that you bought. generally the bento boxes are disposable... so you'd be free to keep it or throw it away.

4:57 AM

 

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