Here are some things that happened while I was still waiting for my soot pencils to dry out.
Iâve been struggling with this for a while, but I really want to do a few experiments to see if I can finally start eating Japanese food again. Originally, I was ready to blast this kitchen apart with all my modern knowledge, but when I let it loose, the result was less of a blast and more of a fizzle.
After all, itâs fundamentally hopeless, right from the beginning. I really crave Japanese food, but thereâs no rice. No miso. No soy sauce. You canât buy mirin or other kinds of sake anywhere, of course. If I donât have the right seasonings, I donât think Iâve got any options. I canât think of anything I can actually make.
Well, you know, I actually do know how to make miso and soy sauce, right? If Iâve got the ingredients, Iâve got the knowhow. Itâs just soybeans and koji1. I learned it in elementary school! We went on a field trip to a miso factory, and I actually paid a lot of attention to how they made it in the olden days.
But, where do I find soybeans or koji in this world? Itâs possible that I could substitute some other kind of bean for soybeans, but where can I actually buy koji? Of course, you can make koji from things that you can find in nature, but thatâs a really scary proposition. After all, koji is mold, right? If I mess up even a little bit, Iâm going to drag every single member of my family into a nightmare of food poisoning. Even if I were to just happen across koji, then thereâs still the terrifying thought of trying to ferment something in this bacteria-infested place, plus it will put off enough of a stench that itâll get thrown out long before itâs complete.
So, I gave up on making my own seasonings and started thinking long and hard about what kinds of Japanese food I could possibly make without any Japanese seasonings at all.
How about sashimi? We donât have any soy sauce, but if you eat it with citrus fruit juice mixed with salt, that would still be tasty, right?
Although, this place doesnât seem to be close to the ocean. Even when I search through the town market, I canât find anyone selling fresh saltwater fish. Thereâs no wakame or other kinds of seaweed for sale, either. Forget sashimi, I canât even make a seaweed salad.
So, if thereâs no seafood, thereâs obviously no kombu. No bonito flakes, either. I want to make Japanese food, but I canât even make dashi2. This is a fatal blow.
Man, Iâm not even going to ask for instant dashi⌠just, give me some kombu and bonito flakes, please?
Thereâs these cucumber-like things that could be pickled, but I donât have soy sauce, my mother wonât let me use any sugar, and I donât have any kind of vinegar to use except wine vinegar, so the taste is so wildly different that I canât be satisfied with it at all. I tried making it once, but it was so harshly sour that it was nothing at all like the pickles I was thinking of.
Vexed over my inability to do anything at all, I tried something very simple that even a child like me could do: I rubbed salt into slices of a pseudo-cucumber and ate it. The salt drew out a little bit of the moisture and made it just a little bit more tender, and it had the perfect amount of saltiness to remind me just a little of tsukemono3. I thought that Iâd finally be satisfied once Iâd tasted something remotely Japanese-y, but, on the contrary, it only made me cry for the white rice I so dearly miss. Incidentally, I tried putting the salted cucumber on the multi-grain bread we have in the house, but that didnât work at all; they donât have particularly good affinity.
Rice! Rice! Japanese food! Someone, please! Give me some Japanese food!!
Thanks to those cucumbers, my cravings for Japanese food became so great that I thought I might try going to the river, catching some fish, and making something even vaguely Japanese. I canât use fire, so I donât have any alternatives but drying, so I decided to try drying out whatever fish I could catch. If I brought along some salt, then I could salt the fish and let it dry, and that might even work. âŚI really hoped it would work.
âHey, Lutz,â I said. âI want to catch some fish. Can I do that in this river?â
âI donât think youâd be able to.â
Just like he said, I was completely defeated. Fishing is, by itself, its own challenge.
As I sat there, dejected, Lutz caught some fish and brought them over to me.
âLook, I caught some, but what are you thinking of doing?â
âCan I have these?â âYeah, sure, I donât really need them.â âLutz⌠are you able to make a fire? I want to try making âshioyakiâ.â4
I canât wait at all, so I try cooking the fish he brought me shioyaki-style, like I would sweetfish. Then, I took a bite.
âŚFoul! Bitter! Awful!
My face immediately scrunched up after just one bite. Strange, it was far less refined of a taste than I was expecting. What on earth could make it smell so awful? I didnât think my grilling methods were wrong, so I tilted my head to the side, searching my memories to figure out what could have possibly happened. Lutz looked on with a frown.
âIf you donât cook it right,â he says, âit must really stink when you eat it like that, right?â
ââŚâŚYeah, it stinks.â
This is a stinky fish. It would have been great if he told me that earlier.
Next, I pulled out my knife. Itâs different both in form and function than a modern kitchen knife, and itâs a little bit worn, but thatâs not going to have any effect on the flavor. I sharpened a stick and then speared the fish through, thinking I could actually make dried food like this. I left it alone for a while as I gathered firewood so the sun could dry it out. While I wasnât paying attention, though, it suddenly became rock-hard and inedible. It seems like, somehow, too much moisture evaporated.
âMaine⌠what is this?â
ââŚFish that dried too much. Dried fish is supposed to be food, but you canât eat this at all.â âYeah, Iâll say. No matter how I look at it, that doesnât look like food at all.â âI might be able to make âdashiâ with this, though. Iâm going to bring these home and try that out.â
This might have been inedible as dried food, but there was a chance I might be able to use it as a base for dashi. When I got home, carrying the withered husks of the fish, I tried my hand at making dashi.
âMaine, what are you doing?!â yelled my mother as soon as she saw what I was doing. âThatâs disgusting! Donât you dare put that thing in my pot!â
âUmm, Mommy, I want to try making âdashiâ, thoughâŚâ âAbsolutely not! The only thing that goes in that pot is food.â
âŚIt probably would have become food, though.
Thanks to the fact that my mother finds dried fish disgusting, my plans to make dashi have been strongly prohibited. Maybe itâs because of the fact that she doesnât often see fish in her daily life that she seems to think that dried-out fish are disgusting. Even though she did look at a pig whose skull was split half open and say that it looked deliciousâŚ
Iâm sorry, Mister Fish.
In conclusion: making Japanese food is impossible, at least for me. Without dashi and without seasonings, there isnât a single thing left for me to try. Once I give up on finding miso, soy sauce, or sake, thereâs basically no Japanese-style cooking left for me to try. Iâm keenly aware of how fundamentally important these seasonings are.
For now, at least, I need to be thinking about what kind of foods I can make that, even if theyâre only tangentially Japanese, still have the kinds of flavors that you might find in Japan. Even that would be worthwhile. Yeah.
Then, somehow, a bird was delivered to my house. It seems like one of our neighbors managed to bring down five birds while in the forest. In this season, it would be almost impossible for them to eat all of that before it spoiled, so they gave it to my father, repaying him for when he did that same for them a while ago.
The one to handle preparing this bird, whose name I donât even know, was my mother. The knife used to prepare the meat is very large, so not only I but even Tory canât handle it.
âMaine. Come here and pluck the feathers for me,â she says. âO, okayâŚâ
I grabbed hold of the bird as it lay limply on the table, then started pulling out its feathers. The disturbing sensation of the feathers pulling free sent shivers through me, giving me goosebumps. I told myself that I had no choice, and itâs all for the sake of eating it, so I plucked the feathers, struggling not to cry. It looks like itâll be a long while before doing this sort of work becomes simple for me. However, when it came time to clean out the internal organs, Iâm proud to say that I didnât faint, didnât run away, and was able to stay standing. I think Iâve grown a little, if I may say so myself.
âNow, Maine, weâre ready to start cooking.â
âGot it!â
After a lot of thought, I realized that I might be able to make a stock out of the leftover chicken carcass. If I have chicken carcass soup as a base, the number of things I can cook dramatically increases. I have neither kombu nor bonito flakes, but I wondered if I could make a usable stock if I substituted some other dried mushrooms for shiitake.
However, just making the soup was difficult. My mother had no idea what I wanted to do, and didnât help at all. It seemed she wanted to eat it grilled. I firmly insisted that it was my day to be the cook, however, and got her to give me the carcass and a few other large cuts of meat. After that, I was left to do everything myself.
I filled our biggest pot with water, then added the carcass, some breast meat, and some herbs one-by-one. Next, I started going through our vegetables, looking for things that have the right taste, smell, and texture even if they didnât have the right taste. I found that smelled like an onion, something that tasted a little like ginger, something that smelled a bit like garlic, and some leaves that were kind of like bay leaves, and so on. In order to get rid of any foul smells the bird might give off, I started adding these things to the pot one by one.
âMaine, wait!!â cries my mother, suddenly. I freeze, knife in hand, holding the garlic-smelling plant on the cutting board by the leaves. âHuh?â
âThatâs too much for you to handle. Itâs brutal!â
I stared blankly down at the vegetable, which looked like an ordinary radish, but white. She rushed over to confiscate both the knife and the radish. Grasping it tightly by the leaves, she holds it firmly down on the cutting board, giving it a look like sheâs daring it to run away. With a scowl, she chopped straight down, slicing the top cleanly off. At the same instant, I heard a sharp scream. From the radish.
âUh? What?â
I blinked disbelievingly, convinced that I had to have misheard. My mother let go of the leaves, flipped the knife sideways, and smashed down on the radish with a loud bang, just like how you crush garlic. Crushing it like that took way less time than the fine-grained chopping I was planning on doing, so I thought she had saved me a lot of effort. When she lifted the knife, though, the white flesh of the radish had somehow turned red, almost like blood had spread over its surface. Scary.
âAll set,â she says. âYou can use this once you make sure to wash it properly.â
ââŚOkay.â
My motherâs expression seemed far more brutal than the radish was. I was just seeing things, right? Yeah. just seeing things. A trick of the eyes.
In this world, I occasionally see vegetables that resemble ones that I know from Earth, but there are lots of incomprehensibly strange foods here too. Whenever I run across a weird ingredient like this one, it only just reawakens the feelings that Iâm no longer in the world I know.
Despite that little incident, I carefully skimmed the denatured fats off the top of the broth, taking with it the leaves that I used to soak up the bad flavors. I remember hearing that youâre supposed to bring everything to a boil, drain off all the water, and then re-fill the pot clean water, but Iâve never had a soup that tasted bad because I didnât do that. I ignored that particularly bothersome step and just let it simmer over a low heat.
After I let it simmer for a while, I pulled out just the breast meat from the stock. I quickly quenched it in water, then pulled the tender meat apart into shreds. This will be delicious as a garnish on top of a salad.
As the soup simmered atop the stove, I worked on preparing the rest of the meat. I took the heart, the gizzard, and the other parts that go bad super easily and chopped them into chunks small enough to easily eat, then sprinkled salt and liquor on them. Itâs a simple way of baking these so you can more easily eat them. This is probably the kind of cooking that my family will be most easily able to understand. For an instant, the words âcharcoal grillâ flashed across my mind, but I had other ways to cook it so I gave up on the idea.
Our dinner was going to be organs and thigh meat. My mother slaved away over the thighs, cooking them like roast chicken, and prohibited me from interfering with that at all. I sprinkled salt and liquor on the breast meat, then put it aside in the winter preparation room so that I could use it in the next dayâs cooking. If I had a refrigerator or airtight plastic bags, I could make chicken ham, but, alas, I donât.
ââŚThat smells pretty good!â says my mother. âThe taste isnât quite there yet.â
My mother had been avoiding the stock pot as if it she thought it contained something unpleasant, but the scent of soup that started wafting through the air made her come a little closer to investigate. There was nothing left to do on the soup but let it simmer and carefully skim off the fat, so I started finely chopping some of the vegetables. Thanks to this body, everything I want to do takes a tremendous amount of time, so itâs best if I start on my next steps early.
My first experiment in my plan to eat Japanese-y food was nabe.5 After all, I thought, if you have dashi, you can make nabe, right? I donât have access the dashi that Iâm familiar with, but I had chicken soup. I have neither ponzu6 nor sesame sauce, so I decided to cook pomay (the fruit that looks like a yellow pepper but tastes like a tomato) and some herbs into the broth make it into something like a tomato nabe.
I took the wingtips, which my mother says are hard to actually use because theyâre so bony, and added them to the pot. While they cooked, I chopped up some various seasonable vegetables, none of which I know the name for, into the right size for serving. When these are all cooked together in the broth, theyâll be quite delicious. Thatâs nabeâs true charm, I think.
âAh,â I said, âThat looks about ready.â I set a strainer on top of our second-biggest pot. âMommy, could you help me, please?â
âWhat do you need me to do?â âI want to pour all of the soup in here to strain it, so that I can get out the parts I donât want in it.â ââŚRight,â she said, looking a little bit relieved, âthereâs no way we were going to eat that, after all.â
She poured out the chicken carcass soup into the strainer. I washed out the first pot, then had her pour the filtered soup back in there. Our second-biggest pot is the most-used pot in the house, so using that to keep soup stock would be a huge hindrance. Even my next few steps in making pomay nabe needed that pot.
I added some chopped, dried mushrooms to the finished soup stock, then got to work on making the pomay nabe. I carefully pulled the edible meat off of the boiled carcass and wingtips that we strained out of the soup, taking care to avoid stabbing myself on all of the tiny bones in the meat.
Based on the delicious scent of my motherâs roast chicken that drifted through the room, and the amount of time I think itâs been since we started, I thought it was just about time for me to put the finishing touches on the nabe.
âMaine! What are you doing?!â
âPutting⌠the vegetables in?â âYou have to boil those first!â
Generally speaking, when my mother cooks vegetables she boils them until theyâre limp to make them less bitter, then drains the water and uses just the boiled vegetables in the dish. This, however, gets rid of half the flavor and quite a bit of the nutritional value. I canât really complain about my motherâs cooking, but when it comes to my own recipes, being forced to do things my motherâs way would be a problem.
âFor this kind of cooking itâs okay,â I explain. âArenât you going to ruin that tasty-looking soup that youâve worked so hard to make?â
âItâll be fine!â
I boiled everything together while skimming off the fat, until finally the pomay nabe was complete. I gave it a little taste, and it was great. Even without boiling the vegetables first, everything turned out fine. Yep!
âIâm home!â said Tory as she walked through the door. âA~ah! It was coming from here!â
âHi, Tory! What was coming from where?â âI could smell this amazing smell from all the way down the main street! I got really hungry just smelling it as I walked. All the people I was passing were trying to find where it was coming from. I didnât think it was coming from here!â
Is it like how you suddenly get hungry when you pass by a Chinese restaurant or a ramen shop? This chicken carcass soup has a really powerful aroma.
âIâm home,â said my father, returning home from the day shift. âOh! That was my house I was smelling!â
It seemed like the scent of my chicken soup reached far and wide. My family gathered at the table, faces gleaming with anticipation. They all came together just in time for their dinner.
âThis is made from a bird that Al dropped by to give us earlier today,â explains my mother. âHeâs returning the favor from when you shared some of your hunting earlier. Maine and I cooked it up.â
âSo, this unusual recipe is Maineâs, then?â âThatâs right.â
In the center of the table, my mother placed her roast chicken legs. Next to that is a salad, garnished with pulled chicken breast meat. Near my father, I put the salted, baked organ meats out as snacks, and I lined up bowls of pomay nabe for everyone. When itâs all split out like this, though, itâs not really nabe. Itâs more like an ordinary pomay soup.
âWhatâs this?â asks Tory. âIt smells really good. Can I eat it?â
âItâs pomay soup,â I reply. âI did my best making soup from the bird, so I think itâs going to be delicious. Try it!â
As I talked, Tory brought her face really close to her bowl of soup, eyes glittering, then grabbed her spoon and had a taste.
âWhoa, delicious! How?! This is really delicious.â My mother tried a mouthful. âOh my, it is!â she said, sincerely. âIâm really surprised. You were stewing bird bones and you didnât cook the vegetables first, but it still turned out this well.â
It looked like sheâd had a knot of anxiety within her about whether it was going to be delicious, since she knew what went into making it.
âAmazing, Maine!â said my father, attacking his food with zeal. âYouâve got a real talent for cooking.â
I tried a spoonful myself. The chicken stock had a very good flavor, splendidly bringing out the umami of the vegetables. Delicious.
Delicious, but not Japanese food.
The next day, I finished gathering firewood in the forest quickly and headed home. The younger kids have to come and go at specific times, but Tory, whoâs already been baptized, seems to be able to come and go freely without having to ask permission. I went back early with her.
Since I wanted to use the leftover chicken meat, Tory wasnât the only cook for the day. For round two of my plan to try to eat Japanese food, I wanted to make poultry sakamushi.7 I thought that even though I donât have sake, it might have a similar feel to it if I use another type of alcohol.
âYou said you want to use the leftover chicken, do you know what you want to make already?â
âYeah, I want to make âsakamushiâ out of bird meat, âgnocchiâ, and a salad. How does that sound?â âUmm⌠I donât really understand, but Iâll leave it to you.â
First up was the gnocchi. I boiled some tubers, mashed them, and mixed them with multigrain flour and a little bit of salt. Commoners donât have the budgetary freedom to use wheat flour as much as they want, so we use mixed-grain flour instead. Itâs a combination of rye, barley, and oats. I mixed it into a dough thatâs about as firm as my earlobe, rolled it out into a long tube, and started cutting it into one-centimeter pieces.
âIf you donât mind,â I asked, âcould you take these things that Iâm cutting out and flatten them out like this?â With a bit of difficulty, I use the back of a fork to spread out and flatten a chunk of dough. âGot it,â she said, with a big nod.
Spreading out the dough with a fork leaves ridges, so when itâs rolled into a finger shape, it holds sauce very easily. One by one, Tory stretched out each piece of dough that I cut off. Since she has more strength than I do, every piece I cut off is stretched into the right shape in no time.
âTory, youâre way better at this than me.â
âReally? âŚMaine, donât look at me, you just keep cutting. Iâll run out if you donât, you know?â
I have Tory fill up a pot with water, put everything in, and bring it to a roiling boil. When they started floating to the top of the pot, they were finished. I took the leftover pomay soup from last night, add more pomay to it, and stew it until itâs reduced to a thick sauce. Right before itâs time to eat, Iâll mix the gnocchi with this sauce, but thatâs about all I can do on this for now.
âThatâs all for now, right? The salad comes together really quickly, tooâŚâ
âMom will be home soon, so itâs okay if we start the salad now, right?â
As Tory and I made the salad, our mother came home. As soon as I saw her come in, I went to the winter preparation room to fetch the breast meat I set aside yesterday so that I could start on the sakamushi. Iâd left the meat in a room thatâs always cool, on a rock that was cool to the touch, but in this warm season, I was scared of it spoiling. Cautiously, I sniffed the meat.
âŚAlright, it didnât spoil. This is fine.
âMaine, will this pot do?â
âYeah! Thanks, Tory. Since I seasoned this with salt and alcohol yesterday, we can get started immediately.â
Since we donât have any pepper to use as a seasoning, I had no choice but to give up on making it spicy. The actual recipe is very simple. You season the breast meat with salt and alcohol, lightly grill just the surface, then put it in a pot with more alcohol and cover the lid to let it steam.
I thought that I should add the mushrooms I worked hard to gather up in the forest, to help bring out the flavor. I washed them clean, then lined them up on the cutting board. As I lifted my knife, Toryâs eyes snapped up.
âMaine, stop! If you donât put those in the fire first, theyâll dance!â
âHuh?â
No sooner than she had said that, sheâd already started skewering the mushrooms from their base through the cap. Then, she sprinkled them lightly with salt and stuck them in the fire.
Dance? The mushrooms would? Like⌠how bonito flakes flutter in drifting steam? I did not understand what she said at all.
I doubtfully tilted my head to one side, trying to figure out what she meant. Tory pulled the lightly-toasted mushrooms from the fire, turned, and handed them back to me.
âNow theyâre okay,â she says. âTh⌠thanksâŚ?â
I decided that it was a strange turn of phrase, but if Tory said it was okay to use them now, then it must be okay. Itâs just one more strange foodstuff on the pile: a mushroom that requires extra care in preparation. I cut them up, taking care not to burn myself on the hot mushrooms.
âMommy, can I use this alcohol for cooking? It wonât taste good if I donât use enough of it, so I need about half a cupful.â
âAlright, here you go,â she says filling it halfway full.
I took the cup from her, then climbed up on a stool, stretching up on tiptoes to pour it into the iron pot. It hissed as it hit the hot metal, and I quickly covered the pot with a lid. When I heard it start to bubble, I removed it from the fire, cooking the chicken with just the heat still trapped in the metal of the pot.
âYouâre taking it off already?â
âYeah. Iâm going to cook the meat for another ten minutes just using the heat in the pot. If I cook breast meat over a fire for too long, itâll get all dry and hard to eat.â
I heated the pomay sauce I made from the leftover soup and the fresh gnocchi, then mix them together. Toryâs salad was finished as well. Just like the previous dayâs dinner, we used shredded breast meat as a topping. Iâm very pleased with how that meat turned out.
âTodayâs dinner looks great too!â
âWeâll have to be sure to thank Al.â
Given the state of our budget, seeing so much food lined up on the table like that is a rare sight indeed. Itâs a big deal to give someone a bird like that.
âIâm home,â said my father, walking through the door with a big smile on his face and high expectations for dinner. âAnother delicious looking meal today!â
He told us about how much he was bragging about last nightâs meal to his coworkers at the gate. I hoped that his overly-doting-father filter was making him massively exaggerate. Iâd be much happier if it was all in his head. If it wasnât, itâs going to make it a bit harder for me to go to the gates.
âLetâs dig in!â
âWhoa, amazing! This is delicious, Maine!â
Toryâs eyes went wide as she took a bite of sliced-up poultry sakamushi. As soon as my mother had one mouthful, she smiled brilliantly.
âItâs so simple to make, but this breast meat is so wonderfully tender. The flavor of the mushrooms has baked into it as well, itâs really delicious. Is it because we used good liquor, I wonder?â
âI think so. The whole dish brings out the depth of flavor of the honey wine.â
As soon as I said that, my fatherâs face went pale, and he dropped his fork with a clunk. He stood up and woodenly walked to the shelves, picking up the earthenware pot in which we store the alcohol. When he saw how much was missing from the small pot, his head suddenly dropped, and he looked like he was moments away from bursting into tears.
ââŚM, my precious alcohol gotâŚâ
Sorry, sorry. I mean, when I asked my mother for some alcohol, she said that it was something that heâd gone off and bought in secret, and that it would be such a shame if all of us couldnât enjoy how delicious it was. She had a bit of a wicked smile on her face when she said that, and I thought it would be best to just follow along through that unusual occurrence.
Since it was honey wine that I used, it had a different sort of sweetness than it would have if Iâd used real sake, so once again it wasnât really much like Japanese food. It was another completely different thing.
Aaah, I really want Japanese foodâŚ
Although words like âdanceâ, 'struggleâ, and âdangerâ come up when talking about some of the ingredients here, it looks like Iâm able to adapt the kinds of cooking that Iâm familiar to this new world without any problems. On other days, I made a tuber-based gratin, a pseudo-risotto out of a grain kind of like buckwheat, and a quiche made on top of the stiff dough of the multigrain bread, all of which were well-received.
My family may like everything I make, but as for me, I canât stand this at all. Even if Iâm making Western-style food, we donât have any spices or seasonings, and Iâm starting to get very tired of the same sorts of flavors over and over again.
At the very least, give me pepper! Iâd be overjoyed with curry powder!
There are still many tribulations ahead in my quest to better my culinary life.
* * *
Translatorâs notes for this chapter:
For the most part, Iâve left food and ingredient names untranslated unless thereâs a well-established English equivalent, as is usually done when talking about Japanese cooking. Iâve tried to phrase things so that things are as obvious as possible in context, but there are a few things that require basically immediate explanation.
1. Koji is a fermentation starter made of various molds, yeasts, and bacteria.
2. Dashi is a cooking stock made of kombu and bonito flakes.
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3. Tsukemono are pickled vegetables, usually served as a side dish.
4. Shioyaki is a grilling method, particularly for fish, involving large quantities of salt and a very hot fire.
5. Nabe refers to several kinds of Japanese hot pots. The name is short for ânabemonoâ, which is literally just âthings in a potâ.
6. Ponzu is a citrusy sauce used in a lot of Japanese cuisine.
7. Sakamushi is food (usually seafood) thatâs been steamed in sake.