What We’re Eating: Takashi’s Noodles
Recently, I was at Sunda, a wildly popular new Pan-Asian restaurant in Chicago, having dinner with Judith Dunbar Hines, our city’s Director of Culinary Arts and Events. (Yes, Chicago thinks so much of food that we have a director.) We were discussing an upcoming project when the Sunda’s Food Buddha, Chef Rodelio Aglibot, approached. After exchanging pleasantries with us, he and Judith chatted about a class he was scheduled to teach, and somewhere in there I heard, “Takashi.” I sat at attention because it was only a week earlier I had chosen recipes from Takashi’s Noodles for the Web site. Takashi Yagihashi, I discovered, was also going to teach a class at Chicago World Kitchen.
When Chef Rodelio left, I turned to Judith with my most pleading puppy-dog expression and asked, “Takashi? Takashi’s Noodles Takashi?” (Hey, he may have been another of the numerous Takashis in Chicago). Without blinking, she invited me to the class.
Takashi Yagihashi, an unassuming but confident man, was named one of Food & Wine’s Top Ten Rising Chefs in 2000 and won the James Beard award for Best Chef: Midwest in 2003. I wanted to attend his class for a lot of reasons, the least of which was to get his assurance that the dishes I had chosen were both accessible and ideal for our readers. Understandably, many of the recipes in his book require ingredients that can only be found in Japanese or Asian markets. But then I figured: that’s what the Internet is for, right? I did a search and quickly found wakame (dried seaweed) on Amazon.com, so I knew I choose well.
The class was as much about food as was about culture. Some of basic tenets of Japanese cuisine, and the ones Yagihashi adheres to, are 1. keep human intervention to a minimum, as evidenced by sashimi, and 2. shun, or the concept of savoring the season. With those in mind, I told him I had picked Chilled Crab and Shrimp Ramen Salad with Chukka-Soba Dressing, which got a nod of approval from Takashi-san. What could better exemplify the Japanese’s kitchen credo than ramen, the noodle of choice for summer months, served with raw veggies.
As Takashi talked about his restaurant’s menu which changes often, I was delighted to hear that his staff wouldn’t let him rotate Braised Pork Belly off the menu, as it’s the most popular dish. Braised pork belly just happened to be the first recipe I chose from his book.
During the class, I learned that an acceptable, even encouraged, behavior of Japanese culture is the slurping of one’s noodles. It demonstrates that you’re enjoying the meal, a compliment to the host. Practice slurping Takashi’s Curry Udon. Be careful, though, he warned: slurp too demurely, and you’ll splatter yourself; slurp with too much gusto, and you may choke. You still have to chew those noodles. Let it be a challenge—slurp, swallow broth, chew noodles.
Finally, avoid one of the biggest biggest faux pas: don’t ever stand up your chopsticks in a bowl of rice (or any other food). It’s an etiquette no-no, as it’s a way the Japanese offer food to the deceased. It also symbolic of incense in the funeral rite. No problem here, though, this book is about slurpy, delicious slippery noodles.
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