You don't just have some soup- you pour it into your lacquerware, steaming hot and too scalding to drink- and you inhale the flavoured steam, you watch it waft from your bowl and dissipate into the air, and you gaze into the cloudy depths of miso and water and notice places where the clouds are thick, where they are thin, where you can see the bottom of your bowl and where you can't, and where the colours change and blend.
Snacks and treats are often no exception, and I've had some fun discovering the seasonal items popping up around the conbinis lately. For summer, treats are often made to evoke images or feelings of summer, like watermelon, ice, water, the beach, etc. It gives the treat a whole atmosphere somehow, and makes eating them feel like some sort of event or transformation. The power of suggestion really works here- you aren't really eating ice, and you aren't really at the seaside, but something about the perfectly designed and packaged snack takes you there and you leave feeling a couple degrees cooler and certainly more charmed.
This delightful snack is called Kuzu Dango- it's ground arrowroot with water, and steamed to make it soft and plump like mochi. It's perfectly clear and served in little chunks, so it looks just like a bowl of ice. You can find it in the refrigerated section, so it's nice and cold and refreshing. It comes with a little packet of black sugar syrup to lightly flavour the virtually tasteless mochi, and then you can sprinkle kinako (soybean powder) to top it all off.
also, box watermelon!
Una sandía cuadrada eso es genial!!!
ReplyDeleteUn abrazo linda.
that's so cool! i've never tried that before. and i've always wanted to see a box watermelon. see, and eat :)
ReplyDeleteSometimes Almost Always
That watermelon is blowing my mind...
ReplyDeleteThat looks like such a unique snack. Are they really good though? At first I thought they were some type of fish! The boxed watermelon. . how?!??
ReplyDelete+Victoria+