Author: Josephine Fan

Inarizushi Bear Bento

Inarizushi Bear Bento

It’s not new years without inarizushi! Tonight is our annual etsunengeiko at the Long Island Aikikai, where Hagihara-shihan leads the class from 11:30pm to 12:30pm. It’s a yearly tradition to practice over the coming of the new year. Afterwards, some students choose to partake in 

Overnight Red Onion Pickles

Overnight Red Onion Pickles

This simple onion pickle recipe makes for a delicious garnish for everything from avocado toast to steak tacos. I like to keep a jar of it handy since it adds a spicy, sweet tang to dishes that need a little bit of acid. You can 

Seared Ahi Tuna Bento

Seared Ahi Tuna Bento

Costco and Aldi both have packs of individually packed frozen ahi tuna, which is great for my family who love raw/rare fish often but don’t want to spend the money (or time) going to a sushi restaurant. Our favorite way of eating it is searing it, then cutting into bite sized cubes, and tossing it in a lemon soy sesame sauce with either shiso or scallions (or both!) with some piping hot rice.

You should be sure of the fish before using it in raw/rare applications, namely that it is free of parasites and has only been defrosted right before you plan on using it. I usually toss it in a hot pan to quickly sear both sides, which defrosts it slightly but makes it easy to cut if its still frosty inside. Then once it sits on the hot rice, it finishes defrosting.

I used a flower shaped cutter on a purple sweet potato to make the flowers, and since I grow microgreens (including radish), the cute little stalks are daikon sprouts. The ladybugs are halved cherry tomatoes with nori spots.

Purple sweet potato lends such a beautiful natural blue/purple color to the bento!


Recipe

  • 1 6oz piece of frozen ahi tuna
  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon lemon or lime juice
  • 1 tablespoon sesame oil
  • 1 bowl hot white rice

Optional

  • Shredded shiso
  • Shredded pickled ginger
  • Diced scallions

1. Sear tuna directly from frozen on both sides in an oiled pan on high heat. About 1 minute on each side. Cube into 1/2 inch pieces.
2. In a bowl, mix your garnishes with soy sauce, lemon or lime juice, and sesame oil. Toss cubed tuna in and coat well. Serve with hot rice.

Umejiso Onigiri and Soy Garlic Butter Steak Bento

Umejiso Onigiri and Soy Garlic Butter Steak Bento

I bought a small package of umeboshi (Japanese pickled plums) at the supermarket–I haven’t had it in a long time and memories of the salty-sour treat compelled me to make some onigiri for today’s bento. It’s a traditional pairing with rice and shiso (the red 

Skewered Ginkgo Nuts

Skewered Ginkgo Nuts

Ginkgo biloba is a beautiful tree that has been planted for its ornamental value in both the east and the west. It has been praised for its medicinal qualities and for improving memory. It’s a large and long lived tree, requiring both a male and 

Yakitori Gizzards and Ginkgo Nut Bento

Yakitori Gizzards and Ginkgo Nut Bento

I bought a bag of gingko nuts and picked up a pack of chicken gizzards (they looked so fresh!) and decided to grill the gizzards yakitori style. While chicken gizzards are often not to everyone’s taste (even if they are delicious morsels perfect for grilling over charcoal), most people know they are edible. But have you ever had Ginkgo nuts?

Ginkgo biloba is a tree often planted for its ornamental value–their leaves turning a brilliant gold in the fall with the distinct fan shape. Many a poems have been dedicated its long lived beauty in Asia, while most westerners only know it by a few of its distinct qualities. The fruit, when ripe, smells like vomit, and the trees, in bloom, smell oddly like another bodily fluid that’s not mentioned in proper company. The fruit is also very caustic, requiring gloves to pick up lest it burns. My parents and their friends, when fall and winter hits and the fruits have dropped from the trees, will go along the sidewalk and take them home, probably to the relief of the street sweepers who had to deal with these accidentally planted female trees.

But once the pulpy fruit has been washed away, what remains is a jewel touted for its medicinal properties and memory boosting abilities–the ginkgo nut.

It’s often served as bar food in Asia, sometimes skewered and grilled, other times roasted and served with some salt and cracked pepper. The texture and taste might remind you of cheese, and it’s definitely an acquired one for sure. I like putting it in a paper bag and microwaving them until they pop, their jade green nutmeat translucent.

Since they have a very slight toxicity to them (and don’t ever eat them raw), it is said that you can only eat as many nuts as you have in years, namely, if you are 28 years old, you can have 28 nuts. However, upon further query, no one can tell you if its every day or week or month or year. In general, I try not to exceed 20 nuts in a sitting, even though it’s deliciously addictive.

The gizzards might seem tough to the uninitiated, but after grilling over smoky wood and slightly charred, sliced thin, their slightly crunchy but meaty texture makes you not want to stop eating it!

I use my teriyaki sauce recipe to marinate before grilling, skewered alternating with onions and peppers. This is where my woodburning stove really shines–in addition to supplementing the heat in my house, it also serves as a place to grill meat and impart a smoky flavor.

 

Avocado Ikura Don Bento

Avocado Ikura Don Bento

Both my 4 year old and 1 year old are fiends for ikura (salted salmon roe) so whenever I make the trip to the Asian supermarket (I now live far from Flushing), I always endeavor to buy some. It’s cheaper than ordering at the restaurant. 

Beef Teriyaki and Bara-Chirashi Bento

Beef Teriyaki and Bara-Chirashi Bento

We had prime rib at my mother-in-laws house for Christmas yesterday, and took home a lot of the steak as leftovers. An easy and delicious way to use it up was to cube it and make teriyaki. The sauce is very easy, with all the 

Deconstructed “Boston” Roll Bento

Deconstructed “Boston” Roll Bento

One of my favorite rolls is the Boston roll. I know, it’s weird right? For someone who loves raw fish as much as I do, why would I want to eat something that’s as common as some shrimp, cucumber, mayo, and lettuce in a roll?

But by golly it’s right up there with a nice jalapeno yellowtail on my maki scale.

Today I did a deconstructed Boston roll bento. Kewpie mayo really does make it, but if you don’t have it, add a pinch of sugar to your regular mayo.

You might be curious about the golden tomato looking thing and it’s what’s called a cape gooseberry. It is also absolutely delicious. It’s very sweet, and definitely like a berry rather than a tomato, even though it’s part of the nightshade family like tomatoes. It’s a physalis, so part of the same genus as the tomatillo, so their growth habits, with their cute paper like lantern husks are the same. Tomatillos stay green, cape gooseberries turn into a deep, golden orange color and become very sweet (almost like candy!) with a tropical flavor profile like a mix between a strawberry and a pineapple. I grew some this year with limited success because it was too late in the season when I found them, but I saved the seeds and will start them indoors for next year.

These, labeled as “golden berries” were bought from my local grocery store.

I also added some of my home made olive oil crackers (you can find the recipe here). It’s a simple Christmas theme, and I used some cherry tomatoes and shiso to make a “holly.” The bear is holding a piece of cheese cut out like a Christmas tree.

It’s a quick and simple bento today!


Recipe:

  • 1 cup white rice cooked
  • 1/2 teaspoon sushi vinegar (optional)
  • Shredded nori
  • Sliced cucumber
  • 5 large shrimp, cooked and chopped
  • 1 tablespoon Kewpie mayo
  • Shredded lettuce (optional)
  • Soy sauce, wasabi, and pickled ginger

1. In a bowl, mix your chopped shrimp with the mayonnaise. Set to the side. Mix your sushi vinegar with the white rice and press the sushi rice into the bottom of your bento.
2. Sprinkle shredded nori on the rice. Add slices of cucumber and shredded lettuce on top and finish with the shrimp salad. Serve with soy sauce, wasabi, and pickled ginger (I pour a little bit of the soy sauce wasabi mix on top).

Simple Olive Oil Crackers

Simple Olive Oil Crackers

I was tired of buying crackers and thought it shouldn’t be too difficult to make, right? In my course of trying to become “supermarket independent,” this has been one of my better ideas. What more is that the kids LOVE helping, because it’s simple, with