Beef maki. Truly Japanese

Going to a restaurant and ordering a dish that was originally invented in a foreign country, you never know whether the recipe is the original one or you deal with some kind of a domestic variation.

Before we departed to Japan, I was always convinced that original Japanese rolls (or maki) are served with raw or backed fish, other seafood, or vegetables. Maki are made by wrapping sushi rice and various fillings in nori (seaweed). Contrary, putting meat like chicken inside rice and seaweed I treated as a European invention.

…Till I ordered and tasted rolls with Japanese beef and kimchi the midst of Tokyo.

Authentic Japanese (served in Japan) maki filled with meat.

According to the menu the ingredients to prepare the beef maki were: grilled beef, kimchi (spicy pickled cabbage), sangchu (lettuce), nori (seaweed) and rice, as well as the restaurant’s original sauce. 

Beef maki in the context of Japanese cuisine, is a modern interpretation rather than a traditional dish rooted in ancient culinary practices. The concept of rolling ingredients, similar to sushi rolls (maki sushi), is traditional. The most popular kinds of maki include Hosomaki, thin rolls with a single filling like cucumber (kappamaki), tuna (tekka maki), or pickled radish, often used to cleanse the palate between different types of sushi. Futomaki are thick rolls containing multiple fillings, including vegetables, egg, and sometimes cooked fish. However, the use of beef in this manner is more contemporary, reflecting the integration of Western ingredients into Japanese cooking. Beef became a significant part of the Japanese diet after the Meiji Restoration in the late 19th century, as the country opened up to Western influences and dietary practices.

Beef maki. Truly Japanese

The Chopin afternoon in Warsaw

While traveling or merely spending time somewhere, it is sometimes those simple things often unexpected at all that makes the difference.

Totally unplanned, while in Warsaw (Poland) heading to the royal palace I found myself getting off an express bus as other people did. Just so. As a courtesy for an elderly lady, the driver opened the doors at a stop, not in his itinerary. Ultimately, I  did not reach the royal palace. As I got out, I heard it, the piano music all around. No idea how I made it, but I have simply forgotten that if on a Summer Sunday in Warsaw and in the city center, this is the must-be place. For the next hour or so, I found myself lying on the grass and listening to a piano concert. Simply catching the momentum.

The music was by Frederic Chopin, the most distinctive Polish composer and artist ever. He is famous for his solo piano concerts. The music is one of a kind. He was born in 1810 in Żelazowa Wola, Poland and spent his early life in Warsaw but moved to Paris in 1831 at the age of 21, where he spent most of his remaining years. Chopin had a significant impact on the future of piano music, influencing both his contemporaries and later generations of composers. His health was poor throughout his life, and he died in Paris in 1849, at the age of 39. Despite his short life, Chopin’s music continues to be widely performed and admired for its lyrical qualities and emotional depth.

If I had to make a list of must-do things, while in Poland, going to a Chopin piano concert would be on it. The easiest way to do so is indeed in Summer in Warsaw. Each Sunday there are two open-air concerts in the Lazienki (Royal Baths) park open for everybody. You come in, sit down wherever you want, and listen to music.

The major event around Chopin in Poland takes however place every five years in October on the premises of the Polish National Philharmonic.

The next one will be held in 2020. The competition is broadcast on national TV and abroad. The participants come from all over the world, and all of them are superior piano players. Basically, all competition run-through are true masterpieces.

The open-air Chopin concert in Warsaw Lazienki Park I listened to was held on Sunday, 30th July this year.

The Chopin afternoon in Warsaw

Bigos

Bigos (cabbage stew) belongs to the top dishes of the Polish cuisine. If you visit Poland it should be on the must-try list together with pierogi (Polish dumplings >>>), żurek (sour rye soup >>>), schabowy (pork chop) and flaczki (chitlings). (The latter although their Polish version is quite a tasty one belong however to dishes that would not be touched by many people of some other cultures).

Bigos is a stew made of cooked (better to say braised) sauerkraut enriched with different kinds of meat as well as forest mushrooms (dried) flavored with spices and red wine. The ingredients must be prepared and processed separately. However, after they are added together, it is allowed to cook (or warm) the stew many times. It is said that it tastes even better after it was cooked over and over again. About this feature, Poland had a dispute with the European Commission as food warmed many times has been considered unhealthy. But absolutely not in this case. As bigos belongs to ‘heavy’ meals, it is recommendable to serve it with an alcoholic drink. This time I took a beer, but red wine or one, or two shots of vodka are quite recommendable. The latter, and in larger quantities, would be served if we want to make our dinner a traditional one.

Bigos in its most abundant form, with much meat and mushrooms.

Bigos may also have a lighter version. Sauerkraut in its preparation process is first suffused with boiling water and then cooked till it softens. If water is exchanged in this process (twice or three times), the sauerkraut will become lighter (in color and in taste). Furthermore, you can put in fewer meat ingredients (like only pure meat but no bacon) into the stew. In fact, bigos with no meat but only with dried mushrooms (the recommended kind is boletus) is considered as a fasting dish.

Bigos served with bread.

Bigos may be eaten as on the photo above with bread. For many, it would be sufficient as a main course. However, a wealthy Polish meal (do not even try to calculate calories) would be dark meat (or pork chop) with oil roasted potatoes and bigos.

Bigos