Monthly Archives: January, 2007

Lunch at Iron Chef Japanese’s restaurant Kaishoku Michiba in Ginza

Iron Chef Michiba Calligraphy

For those of you who aren’t regular viewers Michiba is the Japanese Iron Chef in the blue outfit, who is the least defeated of all of the Iron Chefs. Michiba has several restaurants but we had heard that the Ginza one Restaurant Kaishoku Michiba was his signature one. Although we didn’t spot the master himself (we guessed he probably wouldn’t be there for a lunch session) we did meet his daughter. In Japan, lunch set menus are a very reasonably priced way of eating at fairly expensive restaurants. Dinner, of course, is another matter and price bracket all together!

The restaurant was very busy and since we had a last minute booking, the were able to fit us in from 12noon -1.30pm. There were two menus to choose from but since time was a factor the waiter politely suggested that the first one would be best. We had:

Iron Chef Michiba Goho-zen menu

New Year’s Goho-zen Menu

¥3150 (about $32AUD)
Hors d’oeuvre
steamed sushi wrapped in a bamboo leaf and sprinkled with salmon eggs
(sushi rice filled with bamboo shoot, egg, shrimp and shiitake mushroom)

Iron Chef Michiba Entree-steamed sushi

Main course
four individual main dishes served on a lacquered tray:
-seasonal sashimi (yellowtail)
-tender simmered daikon radish topped with glazed spanish mackerel, garnished with spinach, leek ginger and Japanese pepper leaves
-the Chef’s original version of the traditional New Year’s Zoni soup
(tomato and miso flavoured chicken broth with chicken sticky rice cake, taro and spinach)
-dish of the day (hmm counting the dishes on the plate, I wonder what this was?)

Iron Chef Michiba main - 4 dishes

Rice and Noodle dish
your choice of:
Plain rice served with a fragrant miso soup (akadashi) and pickles
or udon (thick wheat noodles) served either hot or cold

Iron Chef Michiba - Udon

Dessert
Yuzu Citrus Mousse

Iron Chef Michiba Dessert-Yuzu Mousse

The Hors d’oeuvre was a beautifully decorated and delicately flavoured sushi rice with a generous smattering of salmon eggs (yum!). And who knew you could serve sushi hot despite all of those jokes about people mircrowaving their raw sushi?

The yellowtail sashimi was fresh as fresh could be and the New Year’s Zoni soup was an unexpected taste sensation as I don’t usually think of tomato with miso together. My favourite would have to be the simmered daikon with the spanish mackerel, perhaps because it was very cold outside, this was a very warming and soothing dish. Also the hand made udon noodles were perfectly cooked with enough spring and softness, such a simple dish but perfect.

The dessert, a Yuzu citrus mousse was apparently made out of tofu which I had seen them do on Iron Chef and it was heaven in a cup. The Yuzu, a tart citrus fruit that’s a cross between a sour mandarin and Ichang papeda it tastes like marmalade and the sharpness of the fruit combined with the creamy voluptousness of the mousse was superb.

Iron Chef Michiba Motenashi-course menu

I guess it goes without saying that it was all delicious and they treated us very well especially when they found out we were Iron Chef fans (a giveaway when you start taking photos of the food I suppose). The lovely waiter gave us all of these things including a couple of samples of his calligraphy and brochures and brought out Michiba’s daughter to meet us and we got a photo with her (she looks so much like him) and she gave us this special large card with his famous calligraphy and his hanko (stamp).

PS I looked up Yuzu on Wikipedia and found this tidbit:

Yuzu is also known for its characteristically strong aroma, and the oil from its skin is marketed as a fragrance. In Japan, bathing with yuzu on Toji (the winter solstice) is a popular custom. The whole fruits are floated in the hot water of the bath (sometimes enclosed in a cloth bag), releasing their aroma.

Haha!

Kaishoku Michiba

Kanematsu Bldg 8F 6-9-9 Ginza Chuo-ku Tokyo 104-0061

Tel: 813-5537-6300 Fax: 813-5537-6301

URL: www.michiba.com

Open: 11.30 to 23:00 (22:00 Sundays & National Holidays)

Closed on Mondays and during year-end, New Year’s and summer break (open if Monday happens to be a national holiday and closed on the following tuesday)

Lunch: choice of lunch menus from ¥3150

Dinner: Offers Kaiseki course, a selction of prix fixe dinner to satify individual preferences and various a la carte.

*applicable tax, drinks and service charge not included.

  • Reservations recommended
  • Private dining available for smaller group of 4 to 12 persons
  • Can arrange recception and parties including weddings

Iron Chef Michiba Brochure
Iron Chef Michiba BrochureIron Chef Michiba Brochure-Japanese Iron Chef Michiba CalligraphyIron Chef Michiba Calligraphy

Wedding cake

How do you make a wedding cake without losing your mind? You don’t!

I enjoy weddings and getting carried away with the excitement of a family in law member’s pending nuptials meant that I had somewhat foolishly volunteered to make their wedding cake. Eight months before the event, I asked the newly engaged couple what they would like and they settled on Orange and Poppyseed cake for the bottom layer and Hummingbird cake for the top layer with Buttercream icing. Little did we know that later that year, a Cyclone would wipe out the banana supplies in Australia so that they rose to $14.99 a kilo. Luckily fate intervened and just before the wedding, the banana price went down to an all time low and the Hummingbird cake was back on the menu (admittedly it never went off).Wedding cake practice

Finding dowel rods and cake discs at Bakery Sugarcraft in Wetherill Park, I now had all the tools for constructing the cake. I did a trial run which was the exact same size as the end product which gave me a lot of confidence and I knew the recipes I had were reliable given previous experience with them.Wedding cake practice

The practice cake was ok but the icing needed work. The Wilton Icing Sculptor set I had bought was not a product I had any confidence in as the cake “tines” would not sit securely in the holder. I wouldn’t have bought it had I seen the reviews prior to purchasing. The fruit we used in the practice cake was what was in season in Winter (we had it for my husband’s birthday), the summer fruits that we used in the wedding cake were more colourful.
Wedding cake practice

For the final wedding cake I didn’t comb the icing at all and left it with freestyle swirls. And as for pics of the wedding cake? I didn’t get too many pics of it in the end except for this artistically blurred one.

Wedding cake final

The recipes below are for regular sized cakes, to make a wedding cake you will need to double or triple the amounts depending on the size that you want.

Orange poppy seed cake

Serving size: Serves 10 or more
Cooking time: More than 1 hour

You will need four large oranges for this recipe, which can be made a day ahead.
INGREDIENTS

4 large (1.2kg) oranges
½ cup (70g) black poppy seeds
500g butter, softened
3 cups (660g) caster sugar
8 eggs
3 cups (450g) self-raising flour
1 cup (150g) plain flour

METHOD

Preheat oven to moderately slow (160°C/140°C fan-forced). Grease and line the base and side of a deep 30cm round cake pan with two layers of baking paper, extending paper 5cm above the edge of the pan.

Grate the rind finely from the oranges - you will need 1/3 cup grated rind. Squeeze the juice from the oranges - you will need 1½ cups (375ml) for this recipe. Combine the orange juice and poppy seeds in a small jug.

Beat the butter, rind and sugar in a large bowl with an electric mixer until light and fluffy. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating until just combined between additions.

Fold in the combined sifted flours and orange juice mixture in two batches. Spread the mixture into the prepared pan.

Bake in a moderately slow oven for about 1 hour 30 minutes, or until cooked when tested. Stand the cake in the pan for 20 minutes before turning onto a wire rack.
Un-iced cake suitable to freeze.

Hummingbird cake

Serving size: Serves 10 or more
Cooking time: More than 1 hour

INGREDIENTS

450g can crushed pineapple in syrup
1 cup (150g) plain flour
½ cup (75g) self-raising flour
½ teaspoon bicarbonate or soda
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon ground ginger
1 cup (220g) firmly packed brown sugar
½ cup (45g) desiccated coconut
1 cup mashed banana
2 eggs, beaten lightly
¾ cup (180 ml) vegetable oil

Cream Cheese Frosting

For a much smaller amount of frosting than you will need for a wedding cake

30g butter, softened
60g cream cheese, softened
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1½ cups (240g) icing sugar mixture

METHOD

Preheat oven to moderate. Grease deep 23cm-square cake pan; line base with baking paper.

Drain pineapple over medium bowl, pressing with spoon to extract as much syrup as possible. Reserve ¼ (60ml) syrup.

Sift flours, soda, spices and sugar into large bowl. Using wooden spoon, stir in drained pineapple, reserved syrup, coconut, banana, egg and oil; pour into prepared pan.

Bake cake in moderate oven about 40 mins. Stand cake in pan 5 mins before turning onto wire rack; turn cake top-side up to cool.

Spread cold cake with cream cheese frosting.

CREAM CHEESE FROSTING
Beat butter, cream cheese and extract in small bowl with electric mixer until light and fluffy, gradually beat in icing sugar.


Source: Australian Womens Weekly