I have foolishly become accustomed to "barista level" oat milk in my coffee. A small carton runs roughly 834 yen. It could be a hedge against gold. I have tried several times to "downsize" to generic "oto miruku" and simply cannot take it. It's watery and tasteless and looks like regurgitated baby formula. Some of you are probably thinking 'that pretty much describes all oatmilk.' You clearly have never seen oto miruku in Japan. The last thing I thought I would be is an oat milk snob. IPA snob? Sure. I mean, who isn't?
Unfortunately, the supply chain forced me to compromise. The harsh reality is that the Nagoya grocers and convenie operators were wholly unprepared for the Douglasses and our eating habits. I'm afraid we are a bit like locusts. We descend on a store and pick one item and purchase all of that item and then we move on. The first three weeks, it was dried mangos. I would go in and buy six packages of the mangos and then go in the next day and buy the last three (it was too embarrassing to buy them all at once - plus, I'm backpacking those groceries home). Eventually, we wiped the store out of mangos for several weeks. Wethen descended on the local Lawson convenie and proceeded to buy all of their dried mangos. By the time both stores were able to restock mangos, our daughters decided they didn't really like mangos so much anymore and instead really really like english muffins. "Why haven't you ever given these to us before?" Lily demanded as she mashed a stick of butter onto a muffin.
Pre-fried tofu runs about 84 yen for a brick, which is a real bargain (unless you're Uncle Andy, when tofu can never be a bargain unless it is in the trash).
This looks like something Hannibal Lector might serve as an entree, but it's actually compressed bean paste. On second thought, maybe Lector would serve that.
"I ate his liver with some compressed bean paste and a nice Chianti."
Eh. The line doesn't work because you want people to be horrified that Lector ate someone's liver, not that he ate compressed bean paste.
I believe this is squid but may also be a prop from Alien. I haven't seen a cookbook that covers this sort of thing, but I'm hoping there's more to it than boiling. Maybe pan seared with a bit of pepper?
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