One of My Favorite Foods: Wasabi!
There are many strange and new tastes that await a foreigner who comes to live in Japan. Some, like pickled plums, chicken cartilage or the fermented soybeans called natto don't sit too well with me, although I've come to enjoy many other foods, including all manner of fish and other good things from the sea. (At my house, we regularly eat tako salad, which is fresh salad with octopus meat, served with a tangy vinaigrette). Another food I've really come to like is wasabi, an extremely spicy flavoring that adds so much to sushi and sashimi as well as soba and udon noodles. Similar to horseradish, wasabi has a very long history in Japan, and there are documents dating from the year 718 that mention it as a medicinal herb, which is interesting since wasabi is known to naturally fight infections and act as an antibiotic, for example killing the bacteria that cause ulcers. At J-List we have many interesting wasabi products, including the hit snack of the season, Wasabi Doritos, real wasabi in a tube, and a treat I personally love to much on, spicy rice crackers and peanuts called Kaki no Tane, which means "persimmon seeds" because of the shape of the rice crackers. Check them out!




6 Comments:
I've never had fresh wasabi but I've seen it in stores here. I'll bet it's exotic as heck to get in the U.S.
12:24 AM
Hi Peter,
Since you sell food products, I'm sure you're knowledgeable on US importation regulations on food items. I would love to get some of those maple leaf shaped sponge cakes (cookies) that are all over Miyajima and the Hiroshima area flown to the US. Is that possible? There doesn't seem to be anybody doing it.
Thanks for letting me take advantage of your Japan knowledge. (And thanks for your blog.)
1:07 AM
Where do you buy the shark skin to grate the wasabi on?
3:39 AM
Please don't mention "natto" again. I lived in Japan for three years, and it brings back bad memories.
10:08 AM
Totalsys, not really sure about those items, they'd probably be harder to get outside of Japan since they'd not keep as long. I'd personally sell yatsuhashi from Kyoto if they kept longer than a week, I love that stuff...
Tudza, is that shark skin? Not sure, I think it's just some grater.
Chas, yes, sorry for mentioning natto twice in a row ^_^
12:05 PM
You can buy fresh wasabi in the States - Uwajimaya in Seattle carries it - but it's like $60/lb. If you just buy a little it doesn't cost too much. It's milder than the powdered stuff, because they don't add extra horseradish to it, and it *is* worth getting it fresh.
Also, that is real sharkskin :)
10:01 PM
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