Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Have you heard of Yamazaki?

Location: Little Tokyo, Pasay Road Makati City

I have to blog about the best fish dish I have had in a long time. I've forgotten the name of the dish, but it starts with S. This is mackerel fish, seasoned with nothing but salt and then fried. It comes as a bento, so you get miso soup, 3 appetizers and a bowl of rice too.


At first, I was looking for some kind of sauce to go with the fish. The appetizers weren't that tasty, and the white thing with the fish is shredded radish which tastes a little sweet but bland on the whole. Eaten alone, the fish didn't have much taste too.

And then I ate it with the Japanese rice. You know how in cartoons or anime, your eyes light up and there's music in the background on the first bite of something divine? Well, that wouldn't be an overstatement. It dawned on me that no matter how fancy restaurants come up with ways to prepare fish and however creative cooking shows try to be, there's no better way to prepare fish than season it with salt and serve it with steaming hot rice. Eating the dish, I was flooded with memories of childhood in the province. When I'm in the province for summer, we ate fried fish everyday with soysauce with vinegar for dipping. My favorites are swordfish, galunggong and dalagang bukid, but later on the cook switched to tamban which I hate because of its hairlike bones. Of course, the fish we had were local, cheap fishes. Now I know stuff like mackerel, salmon, etc. But fancy or not, any fish is noble as food-- after all, wasn't it mentioned in the Bible?

It's sad that we rarely eat fish in the province now. It's been replaced with pork, chicken, beef... all kinds of versions, every meal of everyday. Sometimes granny would make milkfish adobo, but I hate milkfish too. Did our family's taste preference change, or did we just become too indulgent that what were once considered rare pleasures (meat) are now even boring?

I thought I ate a lot after my Yamazaki meal, but looking at the picture now, it's less than what I used to eat as a child. I guess the satisfaction was just so great I easily felt full. By the way, Yamazaki is the grocery where you can find Japanese ice cream, but just a tip: Choto Stop which is at the back sells them cheaper and has a wider selection.

1 comment:

  1. mmm... ^__^ that looks nice and simple.

    Anything tastes nice with rice cooked well. On a side note: Tiger rice cookers are the best rice cookers ever. ^___^

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