Dreams

 

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So I know I promised you guys an article on the delicious fast food joints in Japan (ok, I technically didn’t promise), but I think I’m going to wait till sometime during my trip to blog about that so I can post awesome photos, sounds, and maybe even a movie or two. Just like it seems with everything else in Japan, the Japanese take their fast food seriously, so I should probably make a seriously awesome entry about fast food in Japan. Mmm, just thinking about it makes me want to…keep on not eating American fast food… Not to criticize those who do, at all. I just tend to prefer something in the middle of fast food and slow food… Medium Food?…

Anyway, I would like to talk about a particular movie that was probably my first accurate depiction of Japanese culture. It’s been praised by movie critics and casual viewers alike, and, while it requires a degree of patience and critical thinking that’s not normally seen in many mainstream movies today, it’s undeniably brilliant on many levels. This movie is called Dreams by director and writer Akira Kurosawa. 

I think there are few things more beautiful than seeing a person truly find their dreams and chase them.Akira Kurosawa, the famed director, has not only successfully – though, many artists don’t believe in success because they believe that art is simply the striving for the never attainable state of perfection – chased his dream of becoming a director, but has used actual nighttime dreams of his as the foundation for what I found to be a masterfully constructed movie…Though, I’d rather use the term symphony to describe  Dreams since Dude, Where’s My Car? and American Pie are also referred to as movies.

The foxes, in the first dream, Sunshine Through the RainI didn’t understand this at the time when I first saw the film, and I don’t fully claim to understand it now, but the Japanese people that I’ve met have had this “connected” quality during interaction that just feels, well…connected, like there’s no wall in between. Of course, the opposite is probably true, too… But, like most relations, how people act toward each other depends on the social level of the relators. This is supposedly even more true in Japan, for example, there are about 6 different levels of politeness in the Japanese language, depending on who you’re talking to, the situation, etc…But Buddhism (Zen, plus other forms) and Shintoism, the two primary religions in Japan, have an obvious effect in this movie, both implicitly and explicitly. In Zen, clarity of visual perception and perception in general is an important concept, and in Dreams, Akira Kurosawa allows us to see into what might be interpreted as his joys, fears, and perhaps even a look into his past. 

Dreams is comprised of 8 vignettes, or dreams (running time: 120 minutes.) Throughout the film, the protagonist is the glue that provides cohesiveness to the, otherwise, very contrasting dreams. The protagonist (no name is ever provided, though we can probably safely assume it’s Akira Kurosawa) is a young child in the first and second dream. From then on, he takes the persona of a middle-aged man, and is naturally involved in some more harsh conditions (for example, you wouldn’t see a seven-year old child participate in a long mountain-hiking expedition with potentially lethal conditions.) I won’t attempt to individually describe each dream, because, as I hinted at earlier, Dreams is more similar to walking through a beautiful art gallery with moving pictures than it is a movie. But I will inform those of you that haven’t seen the film that Dreams contains themes that are very culturally integrated parts of Japan. For example, there are fears of nuclear capability and the unknowns of its effects. There are references to Shinto symbols and ideals. For example, the power  and magic of the natural world – water, trees,  mountains- is an obvious theme throughout. 

The last dream in the film: The Village of the Watermills

The only criticism I have with Dreams is the music. I hope this doesn’t affect your opinion  if you’re going to watch it for your first time; I found traditional music quite appropriate, but there were times in which Western music entered the score, and it seemed completely inappropriate. Perhaps the composer had a reason for this – I’m not sure. But on occasion it definitely disturbed a nice harmonious glue that kept the dreams together throughout.

There are, of course, many other movies that Akira Kurosawa have published and many films by other Japanese directors that are definitely worth checking out. Seven Samurai is a black+white Kurosawa classic. Also, I recently watched Audition by Takashi Miike. You may wish to save this one for next halloween… At least, it’s probably not a movie you should rent to bring to your grandmas house to watch this christmas. :-)

Please shoot me an e-mail or post a comment on some movies you recommend~

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Only in America…

Warning: MAY UPSET YOUR STOMACH AS WELL AS YOUR OPINIONS ON AMERICAN FOOD CHAINS!!! 

but…THE PEOPLE MUST KNOW!

Burger King: Home of the Bad Breakfast Recommendations

 

 

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This has nothing directly do to with Japan, but when I saw this sign while walking through the Chicago Suburb, Elgin, for a symphony gig, I couldn’t help but take a photo. The funny thing about it is the symbolic SUV under the sign. I suppose the larger the person, the larger the car they need…

 

I hate to make assumptions, but I can’t imagine seeing a typical Japanese native eating a hamburger for breakfast. If you want to aspire to become larger than life, just eat a burger king for three meals a day. This will preempt the topic for my next post: Fast Food in Japan. 

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YMCK (no. not YMCA – sorry, village people)


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So, being a musician, I’m always on the lookout for new styles as to keep music fresh and interesting to me. While listening to an episode of Chris’s Finding Japan Podcast www.findingjapan.com , it was recommended I check out this group called YMCK (www.ymck.net) What’s awesome about YMCK (yellow, magenta, cyan, key(black) – the colors used in early computer monitors, opposite of RGB system) is that they take sounds from the classic NES (for those of you who have rented out caves to live in as a child, NES = Nintendo Entertainment System ;-) ) All of the sounds are 8-bit, so they’re very rudimentary in waveform. In the Age of Things Becoming too Frickin’ Advanced, it’s nice to hear such electronic simplicity IMHO.

A description from their official website:

“YMCK is the 8bit pop unit formed by 3 persons. The most prominent feature of the band is the 8bit sound that reminds people old game consoles, which attracts the enthusiastic support from wide range of generations. The 1st album “Family music” released in 2004 made a big hit and made their popularity unassailable. Their unique style of live performances using 8bit pixel animation is also highly acclaimed. Their activities are not limited in Japan but also made successes in performing at international music festivals around the world: in Sweden, Netherlands, New York, Washington DC, Thailand, Korea and Taiwan, and CDs are released in United States, Thailand, and South Korea. Besides those things above, YMCK does a wide range of activities, such as remix works, video game sound tracks, DJ performances, development of 8bit sound plug-in software etc.” (http://www.ymck.net/english/profile/index.html)

 

These instruments, combined with the vocals from the group make for an electric experience (pun half-intended.) Since this clip has been on YouTube for a while without being taken off: I’ll assume it’s safe to link it. Enjoy!

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The Mystery Post Demystified!: It’s my Potty and I’ll Blog if I want to…

And finally the mystery episode has arrived…

 

The Rise and Fall of The Modern Japanese Toilet

It’s a dirty blog, but someone has to type it!

I’m sure their are plenty of Japanese toilet-related articles out on the internet, but not many of them look at the history. So, while not being a scholar on Japanese toilet history, I’ll give you a brief summary of how toilets have emerged…

Joumon Period 縄文時代 (14,000 BC – 400 BC ) – According to archaeologists/historians, the Joumon period didn’t really have toilets… It’s guessed that garbage dumps were used for their waste on the outer parts of their settlement…I’m sure Japanese garbagemen of today feel fortunate that things have changed since the Joumon period. 

Yayoi Period 弥生時代 (400 BC – 200 AD)   Sewer systems started to appear, and apparently something similar to what we now refer to as an outhouse was discovered in Nara…

Nara Period 奈良時代 (710 – 784) – A drainage system was implemented with a stream of water that the user would squat over and release their business into. It’s my guess that this is where the modern traditional japanese toilet originated from. 

Heisei Period 平成 (1989- Present)

I’m going to jump forward to the present, because, once again, I couldn’t find much information on the bathroom history…I probably just wasn’t looking in the correct stall…and you never know what kind of crap is on the internet…ok, i’ll save the poop jokes for now…

As many of you might know, the traditional Japanese toilet is not like most toilets you or I have used in our lifetime. This is a good thing, unless you enjoy the workout of squatting over a hole in the ground to do your business. I’m not positive, but I believe this sort was and still is common among many asian cultures and parts of Europe. They’re rarely found in the U.S., if at all. 

The squat toilet is relatively self-explanatory. You squat over the in-ground toilet, and deliver the goods. Unlike western-style toilets, the bowl in squat toilets is dry until you flush it at the water tank (located in the same room.) The downside of this is that there might be a dry piece of feces sitting there, thus allowing odor to spread more rapidly. The upside of this is pending an answer. 

Downsides of a Traditional Japanese Toilet:

  1. If you’re physically disabled, it might be impossible to get business done.
  2. If you just worked your legs out at the gym, it would be painful to do your business. 
  3. If you enjoy reading magazines while getting business done, you probably should be an “ok” multitasker and not have slippery hands (unless it’s something not worth reading…like People Magazine, in which some might not care if it gets wet… ;-) )
  4. If you’ve come back slightly intoxicated from some place and did not grow up with a Japanese toilet, you might confuse it for a bathtub…
  5. Both guys and girls have to perfect their aim.

Upsides of a Traditional Japanese Toilet:

  1. If you can’t afford or don’t have time for a health club, you can get plenty of time practicing squats while also getting your business done. 
  2. Takes up less volume. 
  3. In public bathrooms, you wouldn’t have to worry about whether or not the toilet seat is clean. 
  4. Both guys and girls get to perfect their aim!
  5. Different can be fun, right?

So now that we “covered” the traditional Japanese toilet, let’s have some fun and look at the never-fails-to-impress, Western-Style Japanese toilet………….BEHOLD!

Ok, so it doesn’t look so different at first glance…hmm…but you may have noticed a few curious elements that you don’t on the average non-japanese toilet… 

What a typical North American toilet can do:

 

  1. Flush.

 

What a typical Western-Style Japanese Toilet Can Do:

 

  1. Why didn't they think of this 13,000 years ago???All of the things you see in the picture to the right… plus more.

 

So, basically these buttons control everything but the flush of the toilet. You see to the right there are various lights that can go on or off depending on what you press. I can’t recall what everything does, and the image quality is too poor for my beginning Japanese eyes to decipher, so I’ll simply tell you what the toilet can do. The three green sets of lights indicate the heat of the toilet seat (yes, and it’s quite nice, too!), the water pressure of the built-in bidet (for those of you foreign to the word bidet, it’s an aquatic method of cleaning the anus; popular in europe, too,) and the heat of the water, I believe. I promise I’ll soon give you a guys a more in-depth feature set of the toilet, complete with kanji translations and all; my textbook hasn’t covered toilet kanji yet. There’s another button that plays fake water sounds from a built-in speaker, as to cover up any unpleasant sounds of your own… I’d personally prefer something orchestral like Mozart or Stravinsky to cover up my personal audio, but there’s always the future ahead of us…

On the more practical side of things, the toilet (see first toilet image) contains a sink above the bowl. This brilliant idea allows you to wash your hands with the water that will be used for the next flush, before it reaches the bowl. Since the water will be dirtied anyway, it might as well first be dirtied with your hands. I don’t see a good reason for North American toilets not to have this feature.

The bidet function contains one both for the male and female. I’ll leave it to you to experience it yourself and discover which one is meant for the female, and which one is for the male. Whoever knew toilets could be such a blast! 

There are other toilets that apparently have laser-guided bidet systems (self-explanatory, I think) and toilets that detect the PH level of your urine and will neutralize the water by releasing a counter-acid/base. 

So, a lot of these features are simply more for comfort, but I will attest that siting on a nice warm seat while getting business done is good business, indeed. There’s nothing more uncomfortable than having your warm-rump come in and sit on a cold porcelain seat (except being eaten by a brontosaurus – that’s relatively uncomfortable.) However, this is balanced out with the awesome practical measure built into many of these toilets. Considering the amount of time a single person spends on the pot a year (2500 times a year, about 3 minutes~ average = 125 hours,) we could probably afford to integrate some comfort and energy-saving saving features into it.

 


FLUSH!

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A different type of JET

 

This is Ground Control to Major Tom…can you teach me english, please?

So, once more, postponing the mystery episode, I’ve decided to dedicate this article to what’s been on my mind and hands for the last week. To be honest, I’ve been on a JET craze. No, no, I haven’t taken out a $1,000,000 loan because I developed an interest in flying airplanes, but I have been engaged in the exciting process of applying to the JET Program: Japan Exchange and Teaching Program.  

For those of you who don’t subscribe to the “3LAWRTET Times” (that’s 3 Letter Acronym Words Related to English TeachingTimes,) the Japan Exchange and Teaching Program is a Japanese government-funded program in Japan that brings successful applicants from across the world into the country to help teach English to students in the schools. The program has been operating since 1978 and, last year, accepteda little over 5,000 participants from across the world to come and teach the students about the English language and culture. It’s considered to be one of the world’s largest exchange programs and is definitely the most popular and well-known. 

Because of its popularity, it’s also quite competitive, depending on what country you apply from. A recent podcast I listened to interviewed the president of the JET interview board from New Zealand, who said that in that country, a higher percentage of people who apply get accepted rather than rejected. In the U.S., simply due to sheer number of applicants, I believe it’s the opposite….but what draws people to the JET program?

WHY???

It probably differs per person, but what draws me most to the JET the program is the fact that I would get to both give and receive at the same. By teaching English, I’d get to learn how to better communicate myself to others (through trial-and-error – experience is the best teacher,) learn about how Japanese culture functions (both in-class and out-of-class,) and receive the gratification of having enriched the lives of students with the power of knowledge and communication. The obvious fact that I’m fascinated by the Japanese culture and want to learn more holds true. This is also an actual job, which most college graduates are in need of, but I can honestly say that this is one of my last motives for applying to JET. They do pay well, but if I was in it for the yen/dollars, I would stay back here in the states and save up for more future Japan trips. I can’t think of anything else I’d want to do in the near future than spend a year (or more) teaching English in Japan. 

So, with that said, one might say, “Cool. How do I do it”

The answer: a nice lengthy application process (which I am currently engaged in)

How? Tell me how, now!

To apply for JET, you can go to the JET Official Website and get all the information, plus a link to the application. Here’s the homepage for the United State’s JET Program: http://www.us.emb-japan.go.jp/JETProgram/homepage.html . You first fill out the online application, submit it online, but then it will generate a PDF file for you to print out. You must print this out, and submit all required documents with it, such as school transcripts, proof of graduation, reference letters, medical forms, etc. The required forms are on the application system. 

There are three different positions within JET: Assistant Language Teacher (ALT,) Coordinator for International Relations (CIR,) and Sports Exchange Advisor (SEA) I will only list the duties the ALT position, for that’s the one I’m applying to, plus it’s probably the most popular position sought. 

From the JET Website, general duties of an ALT:

a. Assistance in classes taught by Japanese Teachers of English in junior and/or senior high schools;

b. Assistance in English language education, usually conversation training, at elementary schools;

c. Assistance in the preparation of supplementary materials for teaching English;

d. Assistance in the language training of Japanese Teachers of English;

e. Assistance in the instruction of English language clubs;

f. Provision of information on language and other related subjects for people such as Teachers’ Consultants and Japanese Teachers of English (e.g., word usage, pronunciation, etc.);

g. Assistance in English language speech contests;

h. Participation in local international exchange activities;

i. Other duties as specified by the contracting organization;

j. Be interested in the Japanese education system and particularly in the Japanese way of teaching English;

 

So, as you can see, the job is pretty involved. If you’re going to apply, be sure you’re not one of the many who might think JET really stands for Japan Entertainment Travel, or some variation of that. While I have no experience in the program (yet, hopefully,) I have heard many testify this. Of course, everyone’s experience will differ, depending not only what part of Japan he/she ends up at, but what the attitude the person his/herself has toward it. And, if I get in, I promise to document all of my experiences with it. If I don’t get in, I promise to document all my experiences up until not getting in…

Tiiiiime, is on my side. Yes it is. 

Anyway, it’s long process. The applications are due in Washington, D.C. by Nov. 25th. After this, you wait to see if you’ve been selected from the first round of applicants. If you have,  you then get invited to an interview  in the city you applied from (in my case, Chicago, takes places in February.) After this interview, the results are announced in “Early April,” which you then have to submit a few more items, such as submitting yourself to a background check, graduation proof, etc. etc. etc. So, the steps are spread out a little bit, and I can imagine this will require a bit of distraction from time-to-time as to not wonder “Did I get in?” But practice patience, I will. 

If you happen to have any other information on JET, have participated in JET, or know someone who was in JET, please feel free to comment below!

 

I am very excited about this process, no matter what the outcome may be. Please wish me luck!

 

Check over the weekend for: MYSTERY EPISODE!!!

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Obama, Japan – No, not a relative of Barack named Japan…

So, I’m postponing the mystery entry in light of the new President-Elect, Barack Obama. As you may or may not know, the Japanese enjoy partaking in various holidays that we have here in America, such as Christmas and Halloween. With Barack’s Obama’s victory last night, came an unexpected celebration in the city of Obama, Japan, located in the Hokuriku region, Honshu. You can find it below, in the center of Honshu. 

 

According to the Telegraph ,this fishing village in Japan is celebrating the win with hopes that it will stimulate the economy in the town by attracting tourists. It sounds like a crazy idea, but people, including myself, are crazy, so it just might work. I doubt many Americans will fly to Japan just to see Obama City, but perhaps they’d stop by on their way to Kyushu… Watch this video by CNN.

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The Japanese Concert Experience

Ueno Park - Tokyo

This week has been one of performing with an orchestra in the Chicagoland area. Come here me strike a tam-tam and bass drum in Shostakovich’s 5th Symphony at Elgin Symphony tonight at 8 or tomorrow at 3:30  (http://www.elginsymphony.org .) So appropriately, I will try to entertain my beloved readers with my concert experience in Japan from my trip last year. As always, if you detect an error or disagree, please feel to utilize the comment button located below (unless it’s regarding the election, in which case, you’ll have to find another blog to comment on.) On that note! Go grab your coffee, colored-popcorn (Jewel sold it in the early 90′s – it tasted like crap, but looked cool,) and read about my stumbling upon Tokyo Geijutsu Daigaku 東京藝術大学 , Tokyo University of the Arts. 

On my trip last year, I decided to take a late-evening walk through Tokyo’s GORGEOUS Ueno Park (shown above, I’ll blog about it in detail in a future entry.) One the outskirts of the park, I saw what looked to be music school…(Seeing and hearing instrumentalists through the windows suggested this to me.) While pretty much everything on campus was in the japanese writing system, I managed to make out some names on a board next to what looked to be a concert hall. The only words i understood were “Weber” and “Mozart” This was enough of a hint that there was a music performance, and it displayed the date and time in how westerners are used to seeing them (with 24 hr time format, of course…) So, when I got back to the hostel, I asked my vegemite friends (shown below, right) if they wanted to see it the following night. “Sure, we’ll go if you try some vegemite!” I sacrificed my tastebuds to vegemite and in turn was accompanied with a few friends the following night.

We arrived and walked in through the front doors of the building to the lobby. Greeted, we were, by several female ticket personnel. We asked for tickets, and all of a sudden the ticket people started discussing something that seemed to be of utmost and urgent importance (in Japanese of course.) It was as if I told them that the Chinese were coming to invade and they had to prepare the battle plans…my awesome australian friends Well, semi-long story semi-short, I had read the time wrong on the bulletin the day before, and we showed up about 20 minutes late, so they were probably discussing how ignorant westerners were… But since they’re Japanese, they were very polite about my stupidity (so polite, they made it seem as if they did something wrong) and allowed us to go in right after the first piece was over; It is said that the Japanese are extremely punctual people. They never arrive late each morning (unless they are still working in the office from the night before) and always work past when the boss goes home. If memory serves me right, the tickets costed 1000 yen each (~10 U.S. Dollars.) For those that are curious, what you see below is what a 1000 yen bill looks like. It’s actually a slightly older print of the 1000 yen, but this one’s cool because it has a picture of Natsumo Souseki, author of a great novel I read -Kokoro- in Japanese History class last year (to not digress too much more, I’ll simply put a link to the wiki page for the book so you can read more. Kokoro If you’re in the area and would like to borrow it, just let me know.) So yeah, we were very unjapanese-like when it came to attending a concert.

1000 Yen Bill

 So, getting back to the concert (or as they teach ushers at Ravinia to say to the patrons, “performance” – it sounds more like a $200.00 bottle of wine rather than a $10.00 bottle, to make the wealthy happy or something…) We sat down in the lovely hall (show below, right) and enjoyed a unique concert experience. The entire orchestra was Japanese, but the soloists were German. And the age of the orchestra looked to be well above the average university student age, too so so there’s a chance it could have been a regional community orchestra that utilized the university’s hall, because they did look much older than your typical university students… I have the program somewhere, which is not your typical orchestra program in the sense that it is a large 8.5/11″ which is relatively thick and could probably hold half of Shakespeare’s works…For all I could read of Japanese at the time (none,) it might have actually contained that… Once I find the program, I will begin translating it (the author of a podcast I listen to, A Year In Japan recommends finding a native japanese publication (text, sound, video) and use it as a gauge, so the more you learn over time, the more you can translate and gauge your progress.I think I might just do that)…Anyways, I digress again. Gakudo Concert Hall at Tokyo University of Arts

As expected, the audience was extremely quiet and respectful of the musicians. It didn’t, however, seem as formal as one might expect of the Japanese. I even might say that people in the west are a bit more “serious” when viewing concerts, at least the 40+ aged people. (Once I have more exposure to the culture I’d like to write an entire entry about old people in Japan… They’re pretty tough people… for example, one podcaster said that he sees old lady riding bikes all the time. I don’t see that much here… perhaps it’s all the squatting japanese women (and men) had to do to use the toilets, so their legs are strong and they are fit…) I can feel safe saying this, having attended hundreds of concerts in various parts of the U.S. Perhaps a little Japanese bias is sneaking in here, but they just seem to be more relaxed and peaceful when they have the time… My impression and observations of many (not all) middle-class americans seem to include this image of a husband and wife running around doing errands before going to work each day, doing a couple errands at lunch break, go back to work and maybe take care of a couple errands during work, then coming home and doing other things like business dinners, etc. I am well aware that the typical Japanese businessman work long hours, and that the country has one of the highest suicide rates in the world… but there’s a certain element about that suggests peace. Their culture has been rooted with Zen and Shinto ethics, which are peaceful by nature… And this confusion, ladies and gentlemen, is what shakes me to learn more about this country…soooooo, the concert was great, despite having no clue what pieces they were playing, and a small idea of the period of music. Overall, it was a very positive, musical, and harmonious experience in all senses of those words.

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Dan’s Cooking Corner

I am proud to say that the number of international foods I’ve introduced to my taste-buds have increased exponentially since around my sophomore year of college. Recently, I gained the superficial confidence that I could actually make some of this stuff on my own, and more superficially – make it taste good! When I was in Japan last year, the first meal at a restaurant I had was – i didn’t know the name at the time – katsudon. In my opinion, it’s the perfect runners meal. Lots of carbs, protein, relatively easy to make, and it tastes gooood. I’ll post a picture of my own creation soon enough, but in the meantime, here’s what someone else’s dish looks like. 

Mmm, can’t you smell the greatness from the picture alone? The picture displayed to the right is chicken katsudon. Typical katsudon is with pork, and not chicken. Here’s a recipe, courtesy of http://bentocorner.com for those who want a new exciting fragrance for their kitchen. The only difficulty with the recipe (at least for me) was finding a couple of the ingredients, particularly dashi (a fish stock common to many Japanese foods) and panko (japanese breadcrumbs.) I found the dashi at an asian market in Chicago, and the panko breadcrumbs at a dominicks in the suburbs (but not at the one in Lincoln Park.)  Tell me what you think!

P.S. If anyone has a great method of preparing rice perfectly, please inform me immediately. My rice is always too wet! If you guys donate me some money for a rice cooker, I’ll invite everyone one of you over for a free katsudon meal, with rice that will blow. your. mind. 

 

 

Chicken Katsudon:

How to make chicken katsu:

 

1 pound of chicken

2 eggs

½ cup of flour

2-3 cups of panko (can be store bought or made with plain sandwich bread and grounded in a mixer or food processor)

Oil for deep frying

1. Slice chicken into strips. Dredge chicken in flour, then dip into beaten egg, then dredge with panko. Fry in oil until cooked.

 

To make chicken katsudon:

 

2 cups of water

½ cup of mirin

½ cup of mentsuyu (or you can substitute with ½ cup soy sauce and 1 teaspoon of dashi no moto)

2 teaspoons of sugar (or more depending on taste)

1 ½ thinly sliced onion

3 stalks of green onion

4-5 eggs, beaten

chicken katsu

 

Prepare  the stock by mixing all ingredients except for the eggs, onion, and katsu. Boil the stock in a frying pan then add the sliced onion and the chicken katsu. After 10 minutes, add 3 stalks of chopped green onions. Beat  the eggs and pour ½ of the egg over the chicken and onion mixture and wait for the egg to curdle. Once the egg is curdled, pour the rest of the egg onto the pan. Cook until eggs are done. Top with shredded nori and serve over rice.

Thank you http://www.bentocorner.com/roller/page/bentoblog?entry=chicken_katsu_don for this delicious recipe!

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The classic case of… the groom setting fire to the hotel?

A Word on How Not to Deal with Performance Anxiety

I think we all experience anxiety every now and then, to various degrees, depending on the situation… I am not married yet, but if/when I do get married, here are two things I am not going to do.

1. Try marrying another woman while I’m already married

2. Torch the hotel in which I plan to have the wedding party of my second bride .

“Married man arrested for torching hotel before bogus wedding in Yamanashi

YAMANASHI —

Police on Sunday arrested a 39-year-old married man for torching a hotel in Hokuto City, Yamanashi Prefecture, where he had canceled his wedding to another woman the same day. Nobody was injured, police said.

Tatsuhiko Kawata was arrested for allegedly torching the hotel at 2:20 a.m. on Saturday by spreading oil on the floor in a corridor. About 150 people, who were staying at the hotel, were evacuated.

According to police, Kawada, who is married and lives with his wife, child and his parents, booked the hotel for a wedding party to another woman which was supposed to be held on Saturday afternoon. But he canceled the party on Sunday after he torched the hotel.

Kawata was quoted by police as saying, “I thought I could get out of the wedding if the hotel was burned down.” Police believe he tried to conceal the fact that he is married. ”

(source: Japan Today http://www.japantoday.com/category/crime/view/married-man-arrest
ed-for-torching-hotel-before-bogus-wedding-in-yamanashi)
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