Back in Japan, Iâve never gotten a chance to make a kyara-ben⌠No, I didnât even get to make bentos for those two children I took care of. Never for field trips, sports day, or hanami, simply because they were not my children⌠I was never involved in making bentos for any sort of event.
âŚâŚI wonder how the children are doing.
Alright.
I didnât have much ingredients, and there werenât any of those useful shape cutters either. Not to mention, there were no mascot characters in this world like Pikamouse and Hello Kitten (*1).
But I still planned on making them.
Since I had no bento boxes, I decided to use deep plates, like the ones that you use for soup.
After setting the onigiri in the middle, I began boiling the potatoes, carrots, and pumpkins.
While I waited, I tried boiling the soy sauce to remove the liquid from it.
I vaguely remember that back in elementary school, somebody did an experiment for their summer vacation homework where they tried to extract salt from soy sauce. Typically, when you cook soy sauce, the organic matter would turn into charcoal, and youâd be left with salt, or something like that. For elementary school students though, a simple version would be to pour a small amount of soy sauce into a paper cup, leave it out for a week, and once all the liquid evaporates, youâd be left with salt.
I wanted salt, but I had none.
If this works, the soy sauce should evaporate, leaving salt-like particles. Rather than that, it would be edible soy sauce⌠Is it possible to make solid soy sauce? Anyways, I should be careful not to burn the soy sauce.
I somehow managed to make the soy sauce quite thick. It seemed like it was almost completely evaporated, but it also looked like itâd burn.
Hm?
With how thick the soy sauce is now, couldnât I draw a face on the food for the kyara-ben? Alright then. I didnât make any salt, but this is okay too.
The vegetables were completely boiled now.
I crushed the potatoes, carved out the pumpkins, and cut the carrots into stars and hearts. That was quite the effort.
Would the children be able to tell that the shapes were of stars and hearts though? I know, I could try cutting the carrots to resemble a potion bottle. Letâs seeâŚ
After a hard struggle, I somehow managed to make four kyara-bens.
Since I didnât have lids, I covered the deep plates with a flat plate. Then, I went to the empty rooms and took off the pillow covers from the pillow. I shoved the plates into one cover each, and tied the open end up so that the plates inside wouldnât move.
I wished we had a wrapping cloth.
Also, since we didnât have anything thatâs like a picnic basket, how are we going to carry them to the lake?
Is there anything I could use here?
I remembered that one of the shelves inside the food storage had a lot of tools on it, so I went to take a look. Ah, there is something. There was a backpack-like bag, used for carrying things. This should work.
Then, I grabbed a large bottle to use as a water bottle. After washing it, I filled it up with water.
I need to grab some cups too. Also, chopsticks⌠I mean, forks.
Is this everything I need to bring?
Maybe I should have made dessert too.
ăYuuri-oneechan, weâre done with the birds! Come, come!ă
The door slammed open, and Kirika-chan came into the kitchen.
ăUm, pick the meat you want to use for food. Weâll dry everything else.ă
Kirika-chan took me outside and went around the hut, where the children had butchered the boar.
There were useful materials like feathers set aside, and the meat, bones, and inedible parts had been separated. The birds no longer looked like a bird.
I was prepared to see dismantled birds, but seeing it butchered into a familiar state made me feel relieved. I wonât throw up.
ăWhat should I useâŚă
If we had a fridge, we couldâve saved all of the meat. If we cook the meat, it should last for roughly two days. I should pick something to use for tomorrow too.
Letâs see, for tonightâs dinner, including Rofas-san I would need enough for five people. As for tomorrow⌠since Rofas-san and Bryce-kun will be gone in the morning, I only need enough for three.
âŚRight away, I felt a bit sad.
ăOkay, Kurtz, once you dig a hole, letâs bury all that. Kirika, sort out the nice feathers from the bad ones. We can sell the good ones since they can be used for accessories.ă
Kurtz-kun and Kirika-chan promptly started doing what Bryce-kun told them to do.
ăAh, wait, wait! The bones! Bones, bones!ă
Since these werenât chickens, I wasnât sure if I could make what I was thinking of. Either way, it was a waste to throw away the bones.
I wonder how many years itâs been. I only made it once after I got married: chicken soup.
That one time I made it, I didnât use soup base either, but with actual bones.
I wanted my husband to compliment me, so I told him, ăI didnât use a soup base to make this. I boiled chicken bones.ăI had hoped that he would at least say something like, ăehh, thatâs impressive.ăInsteadâŚ
ăHmph. You sure have a lot of free time.ă
No, youâre wrong. I set a kitchen timer so I could go do laundry, iron the clothes, and clean the house. Every time the timer went off, I went back to check on the soup. I spent more time and effort than usual to make it.
Ahh, now I remembered something I didnât want to remember.