Today I'd like to present a jumble of photos representing my food adventures in Chiba. Without further ado:
Entry #1: "Romantic pig lab" roast ham. Okay, so I made up a translation for the "koisuru" part on my own. This brand name floored me when I first saw it. A colleague in a different department gave this to me as thanks for helping out with some translation work. The meat was incredibly high quality, and apparently really expensive too (somewhere around $1.50-2.00 per slice of ham?). Apparently it's still an up-and-coming brand, but there may come a day when you spot it in the store!
Entry #2: Onion ice cream. I kid you not. Shirako, a little town on the eastern coast of Chiba, is a huge producer of onions...so in typical Japanese branding fashion, I suppose they decided to make this outrageously flavored ice cream. It did not betray...it tasted like sour cream and onion flavoring mixed with vanilla ice cream. Not for the weak of heart.
Entry #3: Soy sauce-flavored cider. The "BO-SO TV" logo signifies that it was created for the local variety show of the same name. A friend gave me a heads-up about it, and then I found it being sold at the convenience store at my work. Not too bad, not that great either - I suppose it tasted like a weak caramel-flavored soda?
Entry #4: Hijiki ice cream. Previously shown in the post here, this is hijiki (brownish-blackish colored seaweed) flavored ice cream. I love hijiki and I love ice cream, but we just weren't meant to be...
Perhaps the oddest combination I've encountered aside from onion...and natto (although that was of course in the neighboring prefecture of Ibaraki).
Entry #5: Sweet potato ice cream. Certainly not as strange as the previous entries, I thought sweet potato was a unique flavor for ice cream nonetheless. Good stuff. Apparently Chiba is the largest national producer of sweet potato in Japan - it produces even more thank Kagoshima, the present-day Satsuma region (and sweet potato in Japanese is satsumaimo)!
Entry #6: Bamboo shoot wine. Although it sounds crazy, it tastes just as it appears - like good ol' white wine! Or perhaps I am not enough of a wine connoisseur to tell the difference? This was again in exchange for some translation work - brought back from the Chiba's little mountain town of Otaki.
Entry #7: I hail from the world's capital of hamburgers...but that did not prepare me for this monster - a 6 full-size burger menace. You can experience "leaning tower of burgers" (my personal pet name for this) at Village Vanguard in Chiba City, previously reviewed here.
Entry #8: Sky Anpan. Anpan is Japanese sweet bread, most commonly filled with red bean paste. This product was developed by Narita (home to the international airport of the same name) - I believe it's mainly sold at stores within the city itself. I have yet to actually find it at the airport, but I bought this particular one at the Lawson convenience store near my work. This anpan is filled with sweet potato paste (again with Chiba sweet potatoes!)...and was quite tasty.
Entry #9: Tasty local products. Last but not least...these examples are tamest of the entire post, but I just wanted to remind myself of all the yummy snacks I got at work - usually complements of visitors, or colleagues who brought something back from business trips around the prefecture. Inside the white paper bag is biwa - or a fruit named loquat that I didn't even know existed until I moved to Japan. It tastes like nothing else I've had - but generally it has very low-key sweetness with perhaps a texture a bit firmer than a peach? And pictured in the cup to the upper left is none other than Chiba-grown peanuts! They were covered with some sort of sweet coating - can't remember anything but that they were delicious, because they were gone in no time.
What do you think? Have you run into any interesting foods in Chiba before?
Showing posts with label minamiboso. Show all posts
Showing posts with label minamiboso. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Sunday, July 29, 2012
Shirahama Ama Festival (白浜海女まつり).
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Shirahama's Nojimazaki Lighthouse in the distance. |
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The highlight of the show! The ama swimming performance. |
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Ama lady breaking it down...dancing the Shirahama Ondo, a traditional local folk dance |
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Ama on standby before the swimming performance. |
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Fireworks + ama! |
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Delicious grilled CORN! |
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Satomi pork (里見和豚), a local brand of pork, seasoned with rosemary. Mmmm.... |
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Lovely Shirahama evening. |
http://www.mboso-etoko.jp/shirahama/event/amamatsuri.html
(More photos and details about the ama swimming performance)
http://www.chibanippo.co.jp/c/siteseeing/2012/07/88110
(Better description of the Ama Festival overall)
Sunday, May 27, 2012
More food hunting.
Once again, our story begins on a gorgeous day in southern Chiba. Overdue for some good old catching up, a few friends and I decided to get together for lunch. I had gone to this amazing restaurant in Minamiboso's Shirahama area over Golden Week, but the weather had been incredibly depressing, so I needed to go back on a sunny day. This lunch was the perfect opportunity for my rematch!
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I kinda wanna ride this van... |
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From the parking lot, take a stroll up the hill...at the top, you'll find this tiny little structure. |
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Odori Kitchen! and the lovely Liz. |
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A perfect day with the perfect company~! |
After confusing our very nice, friendly waiter, we put in our orders! For lunch, you can choose from the A or B sets. They are exactly the same in that they come with appetizers, main dish, and drink...but then, B set comes with dessert.
And so I present...food pic spam!!
(I don't actually know my food names so I copied them from Liz's post...all I know is that everything was amazingly delicious!)
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Appetizers! |
Anyway, on to the main dishes...
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I chose the bamboo shoot & prosciutto risotta. Simple but the textures of each ingredient matched perfectly! |
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Bacon and green beans (string beans, sugar snap peas, and soramame) spaghetti. It may sound easy enough, but it was sheer genius. |
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Gorgonzola fusilli. Feeling hungry? You can order a larger portion for any of the pastas, which is what my friend did! :) |
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Shrimp and asparagus tomato cream spaghetti. This is next on my must-eat list. |
After demolishing our main dishes, next was dessert!
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Spinach chiffon cake! It was very light and fluffy...and the color is perfect for the spring/summer season! |
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Panna cotta. I feel like I could eat this everyday and not get sick of it. It had a milky, vanilla taste well balanced out by the tartness of the berry sauce! |
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Stealing one last photo in the garden! |
Check out the website for more gorgeous photos, the menu, and all that good stuff:
http://odori-kitchen.com/
Saturday, April 28, 2012
Gourmet trip in Minamiboso.
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Inside the restaurant area of Hina no Sato. |
First stop - Michi-no-Eki "Hina no Sato" (道の駅 鄙の里) in Minamiboso! I've gone to almost all of the Michi-no-Eki in the Awa region of Chiba...I'm working on eventually going to all of them! As I mentioned in a previous post, Michi-no-Eki are kind of like rest areas, but better!
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Miyoshi's dairy products are hardcore!! |
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(Okay I am cheating and leaving the photo small on purpose because it's a bit blurry...sorry my lovely models!) |
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Add caption |
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Juicy meatiness! |
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Tucked away near Tateyama Station. |
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Appetizer: some sort of spicy soup, lovely spring roll, salmon, and I think some kind of meat? |
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You can choose fish or meat for your main...I got the fish, which was fried madai and something else...yum!! |
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My companions got the meat, which also looked fantastic. |
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Dessert...you get to choose THREE! I got creme brulee, yuzu sherbet, and almond mousse ice cream. All of it was delicious, but the almond mousse was particularly a really nice surprise! |
Saturday, December 31, 2011
Happy Holidays in the Boso.
Christmas Eve found me back in southern Chiba to spend some quality time with friends.
After a very busy December, it was time to take advantage of the lovely weather and explore some new places!
First stop was Mantokuji Temple ("萬徳寺"), which is right around the border of Tateyama and Minamiboso.
The highlight of this place is this giant reclining Buddha!!! I've heard it's the only reclining Buddha statue in Japan...I don't remember where from though, so please don't quote me on that though. :/
This is one of the last things you would expect to be sitting (laying?) on a tall hill right behind a 7-11...pretty cool! They also had people there to tell you how to properly pray there, step-by-step. After offering up incense at the alter in the middle, you follow the steps up. But the steps are actually a long slope that loops around the statue, so by walking around it 3 times you will naturally wind up at the statue's feet! It's said that praying at the feet of statue can help injuries/illnesses in the legs and feet.
I am not actually whether or not you are allowed to take photos within the museum (sorry)! I did look for signs saying that photography is prohibited, but I didn't see any...
But whoa!!! They had an entire house inside the museum!!! It was a super cool exhibit. You can actually go INTO the house and look around inside it too.
And the explanations for this exhibit are written in the Boshu dialect!!! The lighting is kind of in the way, but it is really neat to try and figure out how the explanation should be written if it were in standard Japanese.
We finished off our day of exploration by going to Hojo Beach in Tateyama to take photos of the sunset! You can't really tell, but the lump right in the center of this photo is actually Mt. Fuji.
Anyway, I'll be going back down again tomorrow to bring in the New Year's!!! I can't believe there's only one day left before 2012.
After a very busy December, it was time to take advantage of the lovely weather and explore some new places!
First stop was Mantokuji Temple ("萬徳寺"), which is right around the border of Tateyama and Minamiboso.
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Admission is 500 yen per person (adults). |
The highlight of this place is this giant reclining Buddha!!! I've heard it's the only reclining Buddha statue in Japan...I don't remember where from though, so please don't quote me on that though. :/
This is one of the last things you would expect to be sitting (laying?) on a tall hill right behind a 7-11...pretty cool! They also had people there to tell you how to properly pray there, step-by-step. After offering up incense at the alter in the middle, you follow the steps up. But the steps are actually a long slope that loops around the statue, so by walking around it 3 times you will naturally wind up at the statue's feet! It's said that praying at the feet of statue can help injuries/illnesses in the legs and feet.
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We drew mikuji, or fortunes. Very ironically, mine told me I really need to brush up on my English. |
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You can also enjoy a lovely view of the surrounding area from the temple! They had free tea too. XD |
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Our next stop was Tateyama Castle! It's so photogenic. |
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View of Tateyama Bay from the top of the castle. |
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With admission to the castle, you also get admission to the Tateyama City Museum, so we decided to check it out! |
I am not actually whether or not you are allowed to take photos within the museum (sorry)! I did look for signs saying that photography is prohibited, but I didn't see any...
But whoa!!! They had an entire house inside the museum!!! It was a super cool exhibit. You can actually go INTO the house and look around inside it too.
And the explanations for this exhibit are written in the Boshu dialect!!! The lighting is kind of in the way, but it is really neat to try and figure out how the explanation should be written if it were in standard Japanese.
We finished off our day of exploration by going to Hojo Beach in Tateyama to take photos of the sunset! You can't really tell, but the lump right in the center of this photo is actually Mt. Fuji.
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Way too much fun playing on the beach even though it was freeeeeezing. |
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