Author Archives | Nina Raemont

Heat of the Week: Pride, Florence Pugh and a gangster walking tour

Is this weekend’s schedule all clear? Fill it up with a craft market, a gangster walking tour or a Florence Pugh feature.

Twin Cities Pride Festival: Celebrate Pride this weekend at Loring Park. There will be plenty of music from Black artists, Indigenous artists and artists of color, along with a slew of LGBTQ+ vendors to support — and don’t skip out on the beer garden either.

Barack Obama’s Playlist: Who knew Number 44 had such a good ear? It’s that time of the year when former president Obama provides us with some summer tunes, randomly enough. This year, the tunes include Jazmine Sullivan’s mighty “Pick Up Your Feelings,” Rihanna’s “Desperado” (a classic), Joni Mitchell’s “Coyote” and SZA’s “Good Days,” along with many others. Not too shabby, Barack.

Minneapolis Craft Market: Feeling crafty? Make way to the Minneapolis Craft Market. Peruse handiwork en plein air at The Lab’s brewery shed. It’s never too early to buy your loved ones a handmade Christmas gift (that you didn’t have to hand make, of course). Visit the market July 17, from noon to 5 p.m. Click here for more information.

“Black Widow”: Two words: Florence Pugh. After Black Widow’s sister (Pugh) sends her a mysterious package, Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson) goes on a journey to destroy the room in which she grew up in once and for all. The movie is suspenseful and thrilling with some twists along the way. And, again, it has Florence Pugh.

Go on a Gangster Walking Tour: Ever wondered about the history of our St. Paul streets? Did you know that, at one point in time, they were run by America’s Most Wanted? Learn the secrets of our capital city through this walking tour that explores St. Paul iconic landmarks, such as Mickey’s Diner, the Palace Theatre and the Old Police Station. Click here for more information and to register for the event.

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Heat of the Week: Spending the dog days of summer in style

We have now entered the dog days of summer, a time of year and a phrase frequently used in day-to-day conversation but rarely understood.

From July 3 to August 11, the sun is chilling in the sky near Sirius, also known as the Dog Star. During this period of time, the sun rises and sets with Sirius. According to Farmer’s Almanac, the ancient Romans believed that the star contributed to the sun’s warmth, making this slice of the season hotter. That’s where the phrase “dog days of summer” came to be.

While there’s still another month until we make our annual Target school supplies trip and usher in another year of education, these little calendrical milestones — the Fourth of July, the dog days of summer — remind us that summer is moving along with or without us.

Enjoy the dog days of summer with new concerts, zippy margaritas and some local tunes that spotlight our beloved city while also encouraging some post-vax debauchery. What could be better?

“I Already Like You” by Dessa: In her recently released song, “I Already Like You,” the University of Minnesota alum and local celebrity sings “This city can feel like a little town,” and if that doesn’t sum up the vibe of the Twin Cities, what does? The song blends techno rhythm with bubblegum pop lyrics. “I Already Like You” speaks to the pandemic-induced FOMO and subsequent horny post-vax rage we’ve experienced the past year. Dessa sings “Already missed too much to take this thing too slow.” Like the rest of us who’ve been hibernating indoors for a year, Dessa proclaims that it’s prime time to go out on our “little town,” ride the horny, vaccinated wave and fall in summer love — or summer lust, whichever floats your boat.

Concerts galore!: It’s a big week for local venues. Jump back into the Twin Cities music scene with a wide array of performances coming at you hot this week. The Turf Club, St. Paul’s local venue reopens today, celebrating its return to the music scene with hot tunes, hot food (their kitchen will be up and running) and a cocktail or two. And after the reopening party, there will be a slew of performances — did I mention Dessa will be in attendance on July 8 and 9 for a performance? Check out Electric Six on July 7, Night Moves on July 8 and plenty of local openers to accompany their acts.

Centro: It is a truth universally acknowledged that a good taco turns a mediocre week into a fantastic one. For spicy tacos, tangy margs and speedy service, make your way over to Centro in northeast Minneapolis. The restaurant was bustling on a Thursday night, but the service and the flavors didn’t falter. While perusing the drink menu, the Electric Bunny and its hot pink hue might catch your eye, but you’re better off ordering the Quincy Margarita. For your melty cheese fix, order the Queso Fundido and revel in the ooey gooey Oaxacan cheese with poblanos and pickled onion. One word: yum.

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Heat of the Week: Outdoor jazz and indoor yoga

As we peak into July and leave June behind, it’s commonplace to feel nervous for the two months of summer vacation ahead. Are we accomplishing all our summer to-dos? Are we curbing FOMO? Are we carpe-ing the diem? What about that fitness goal — are you moving towards it?

Whatever your answer to those questions may be, A&E has selected a few events and activities — places to carpe the diem, if you will — to make the summer worthwhile. Hillside jazz with a view of the Sculpture Garden? Don’t mind if I do. Vegan fried chicken? Sure, why not?

Hillside Jazz at the Walker: This Friday, grab a friend, a picnic blanket and a DIY charcuterie board and listen to some jazz at the Walker. As part of their Hillside Jazz series, the Walker Art Center is putting on new jazz acts each month en plein air, free and open for all to enjoy. On Friday, catch a contemporary spin on classic American jazz with jaimie branch’s Fly or Die.

“Planet Her” by Doja Cat: Hot Girl Summer continues with a female rap album worth bumping to. “Planet Her,” Doja Cat’s third pop album, is just as creative and intergalactic as it is clever and empowering.

Herbie Butcher’s Fried Chicken: Itching for some chicken? Well, faux-chicken, that is. Try out the new walk-up vegan chicken joint from the founders of Herbivorous Butcher, the vegan butcher shop in northeast Minneapolis. Dip your toes into the vegan water with some fried chicken, a maple butter-slathered biscuit and some mac and cheese.

Fitness Classes at the RecWell: Sweat off the stress of your summer course load or internship with a class from the RecWell. Whether it’s a bright-and-early 6:45 a.m. HIIT Express or 5:15 p.m. Yoga Flow, get your body in motion instead of languishing on the couch watching TikToks. For $35, you can purchase a FitPass and have access to fitness classes all summer long. Register at shoprecwell.umn.edu

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Some icy treats, artwork and beats

As we try to stay cool and as far away as possible from the burning sun this week, entertain yourself with some ice cold dessert from MN Nice Cream, some new artwork and music.

MN Nice Cream

Summer is notorious for a myriad of foods: watermelon, smoky BBQ, baseball stadium hot dogs, tomatoes, rhubarb. But out of all these foods, there is one that sneaks up on you in the summer heat and tells you, “Hey, wouldn’t an ice cream cone be soo good right now?” Yeah, ice cream rules the summer months. The closest ice cream shop to campus is MN Nice Cream, and it’s also the most decorative ice cream you’ll get around these bends. With some funky flavors and toppings galore, the shop produces some tasty treats and some Instagrammable food pics (if you’re into that).

Powderhorn Art Fair Preview

Today, tomorrow, Thursday and next week, make your way over to Lake Street and Chicago Avenue for a sneak preview of all of the unique pieces of art, jewelry and sculptures the Powderhorn Art Fair has to offer while jamming to live music from the Avant Garde. This year’s Powderhorn Art Fair in August marks thirty years running the local attraction. There’s bound to be some exceptional pieces found at the fair itself, but until then, you can sustain your art heart with this fair preview.

“Jubilee” by Japanese Breakfast

Michelle Zauner has made a name for herself for being sad. First, it came in the form of her New Yorker essay “Crying in H Mart,” where she wrote about losing her mother to cancer and finding comfort in the Korean grocery store. Then, this year brought a book of the same name. With the memoir soon to be turned into a movie, there is enough of Crying in H Mart to go all around. And while we patiently wait for the movie, we can listen to her album that is much less about sadness and more so about joy. Just like her stories, her lyrics are strong and her music is bright, written and produced with sober optimism.

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Heat of the Week: New Lorde, new Megan, new music for everybody

It’s a hot week for some hot new jams, whether you take your jams in the form of sunshine-y tunes, a movie-musical or ahi tuna.

“Solar Power” by Lorde: In case you haven’t heard the big news, Lorde is back. The New Zealand pop star released “Solar Power” last week and we’re still feeling the burn. Her new single encourages us to throw our phone into a body of water, romp around the beach with friends and embrace the summertime, all while bopping along to a celebratory tune.

“Blouse” by Clairo: If you want a song that is incredibly different from “Solar Power,” this is it. A string-heavy song with intimate lyrics, “Blouse” is perfect for a candle-lit cabin night in the woods. Clairo’s voice is soft and timid as she sings; This song is for those summertime sadness days.

“Thot Shit” by Megan Thee Stallion: We can always rely on Megan Thee Stallion for a summer bop — not too long ago everyone was making TikTok dances to the song of the summer, WAP. She’s at it again with “Thot Shit,” which reminds you to shake what you’ve got to a bumping beat.

JJ’s Poke: There’s something incredibly satisfying about a hearty bowl of rice, some fresh tuna, edamame and sesame seeds dressed in a spicy mayo sauce and eaten in the sun. At JJ’s Poke in Dinkytown, you can create your own bowl of poke and decorate it with as much nori or tamago as your heart desires.

“In the Heights:” If you want a movie that’s also a musical that’s also a celebration of culture that’s also a critique on gentrification, then “In the Heights” is for you. Director Jon M. Chu, the director of “Crazy Rich Asians,” adapted the movie from Lin-Manuel Miranda and Quiara Alegría Hudes’s Broadway musical. The movie takes place in the New York City neighborhood of Washington Heights where we meet all the characters of this vibrant community and learn a few songs and dances along the way.

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Heat of the Week: mini-golf with a view and vegans eating barbecue

With this week’s weather forecast in the 90s and some restaurants, movies, events, music and books to check out, get a load of this week’s heat — in more ways than one.

Something to try:

Beast Barbecue: For far too long, barbecue season has excluded our vegan and vegetarian besties. But at Beast Barbecue on East Hennepin Avenue, you can find vegetarians, vegans and omnivores gathering at the same table, eating different smoky items off the same menu. For the vegans/vegetarians, try their smoked Vegan Jackfruit Ribs or their Smoked Portabella Sammie. For the omnivores, try their Smoked BEAST or Smoked Salmon with a preserved lemon gremolata.

Something to watch:

“Cruella”: Have you ever watched “One Hundred and One Dalmatians” and thought, “Hmm, I wonder why Cruella de Vil is so…. devilish”? In Disney’s newest live-action movie, you’ll discover the answer, with some mid-1960s London fashion and some plot twists, because who doesn’t love a good origin story mixed with a bit of haute couture?

Something to do:

Skyline Mini Golf on the Walker’s rooftop: Maximize your Thursday afternoon with some skyline mini golf. Capture breathtaking views of Minneapolis’ skyline all while scoring a hole-in-one — or if you’re anything like me, a hole-in-five (or six or seven). Not only is this a cheap date idea ($10 per person), it’s also a great way to spend an hour or two with some friends.

Something to tap your foot to:

VIAL’s “Roadkill”: Minneapolis’ favorite “honk rock” band’s new single “Roadkill” comes out this week. Listen to it on June 8 when it debuts.

Something to read:

“¡Hola Papi!: How to Come Out in a Walmart Parking Lot and Other Life Lessons” by John Paul Brammer: John Paul (JP) Brammer’s new book of essays debuts June 8. It details his experience growing up in rural Oklahoma as a biracial, queer man and confronts questions we’re all struggling to answer. Brammer runs his own substack newsletter ¡Hola Papi!, and he’s an illustrator and columnist — it’d be a shame not to mention the fact that his tweets are also very good.

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Artist spotlight: Get to know local artists

We’re lucky to live in a city with so much art, but how do we keep track of it all? Well, for starters, here’s a list of a few notable local artists.

Artist Heather Friedli poses for a portrait with two of her dogs on Sunday, April 25. Friedli creates “land and heritage inspired” paintings, in addition to being a snow sculptor. (Emily Urfer)

Heather Friedli: Heather Friedli is a St. Paul-based contemporary impressionist, painting the beauty of Minnesota and beyond with a dazzling color palette inspired by her land and heritage as an Odawa, Xicana, American woman. The oil painter and professional sculptor grew up finding solace in the flowers that grew through the pavement cracks in Los Angeles. So when she spent six and a half months hiking the Appalachian Trail, wonderstruck by what she saw and itching to paint it all, she knew that she’d make a career out of painting nature. Support Friedli’s art here and here.


Courtesy of Jill Kittock

Jill Kittock: If you ask Northeast Minneapolis-based illustrator Jill Kittock what themes underlie her work, her response will be “humans doing things.” Old photographs of people going about their day, food and lowbrow culture inspire her colorful, digitally-painted works. You can find her most recent work on Summit Brewing’s limited edition commemorative screen print poster, that celebrates the 88th anniversary of Repeal Day. Check out Jill’s other works here.


Courtesy of Gabriela Sierra Bedon

Gabriela Sierra Bedon: Recent University of Minnesota alum Gabriela Sierra Bedon uses a palette of pastel and bright colors to create her work that centers representation, beauty and connection. Her first solo show, Belonging, Together, on exhibition at Banfill-Locke Center for the Arts, holds space for women of color. The exhibition features 15 different portraits and “responds to their historical lack of representation in Minnesota both culturally and in the art world.” Check out more of Bedon’s work here, here.


Photo by Rubinski Works, courtesy of Leeya Rose Jackson

Leeya Rose Jackson: The art director, multi-disciplinary artist and creative founder of Noisemakers Design, Leeya Rose Jackson goes by @leeyamakesnoise on Instagram for a reason. Currently living in South Minneapolis, Jackson describes her own art as loud — full of patterns, color and culture. As a queer Black woman, Jackson’s inspiration comes from representing the “beauty and joy of the general BIPOC community and LBTQIA+ community,” she said. Jackson has tons of projects underway, but here, here and here are a few you should check out.


Courtesy of Barrett Lee

Barret Lee: Mixed media artist Barret Lee takes his inspiration from 90’s animation — think “Aaahh!!! Real Monsters” and “Doug” — and comics to create art that blends illustrative characters with narrative driven worlds. Lee’s working on his art for his own solo showing at Gamut Gallery in the fall, but until then support his art here.


A photo of Maggie Thomspon (Courtesy of Jaida Grey Eagle)

Maggie Thompson of Makwa Studios: Maggie Thompson’s artistic journey began in fourth grade when she learned how to knit. Many years later, the textile artist switched from her studies in architecture to textiles, drawn to creating something immediate with her hands. Thompson’s work explores identity, culture, authenticity, grief and loss in relation to the psychology of the body. You can find Thompson’s “Family Portrait,” on display at the Minneapolis Institute of Art. Support her art here.


Artist Lizzie Christian poses for a portrait with one of her prints on Monday, April 26. Christian is the block print artist behind “Rare Press.” (Emily Urfer)

Lizzie Christian: The words of affirmation printmaker Lizzie Christian writes on her print pieces — “just existing is plenty for today” or “open your mind and then commit to real change” — are words of wisdom she has given herself once or twice. Christian, a University of Minnesota alum and daughter of Allen Christian from West Bank’s House of Balls, also teaches occasional workshops at Rock, Paper, Scissors in the Whittier neighborhood. Support her art here.


Courtesy of Philipo Dyauli

Philipo Dyauli: Raised in Tanzania, Philipo Dyauli creates work that centers his experience of life in the U.S. and East Africa, taking inspiration from African music, films and nature. Dyauli isn’t just a self-taught illustrator and painter; he also gives back to his Minneapolis community through his work at the Northeast Minneapolis Arts Association, his full-time work at Partners in Quality Care and his efforts to raise awareness of police brutality. Check out his art here.


 

Maggie Cole: New Brighton-based illustrator Maggie Cole draws imaginary portraits of people — mainly women — from her mind. You can find her whimsical work, rarely without a pop of bright red, on her Instagram, or check out her brand, Super Exclusive Stuff. Check out her art here.

Correction: a previous version of this story misspelled Gabriela Sierra Bedon’s name. 

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Q&A: Jamie Schumacher talks the West Bank with her new book, “Butterflies and Tall Bikes”

Jamie Schumacher, the former executive director of the West Bank Business Association and University alum, spent the past year writing “Butterflies and Tall Bikes,” a love letter to the West Bank, with stories from West Bank residents, business owners and creatives themselves. Her book comes out May 18, so A&E spoke with Schumacher about her writing process, the West Bank and the impetus behind “Butterflies and Tall Bikes.”

What was the writing process like for “Butterflies and Tall Bikes?”

When you write something, you’re innately centered in your experience, but with this one, I really wanted to be more intentional and actually just interview people and have their voices and stories in there. I shared all the interviews back with folks and let them make edits to make sure I captured what they said correctly. What I wanted to do with this book is really lift up, especially for the residents, what they want. Cedar-Riverside can get neglected sometimes in positive news or even in just city policy, it can get overlooked. And so a lot of my job and my passion and my history has been just advocating for what the neighborhood wants, and this book was an opportunity to lift up some of those voices.

Your book features stories from everybody in the West Bank/Cedar-Riverside neighborhood, from residents to business owners. How did you choose which stories would be highlighted in the book?

One way of putting it would be diversity from every angle. We have residents, we have businesses, we have folks that currently live in the neighborhood, we have folks that used to live in the neighborhood. It’s just a mix of people that as we kind of created this timestamp and wrote this love letter to the neighborhood, it really was like a 360 view.

One of the things I noticed while I was reading was how I feel like your book really does provide this portrait of a neighborhood, even when we can’t necessarily spend so much time in that neighborhood because of COVID-19 and closures and everything. Through your stories and conversations, the reader is meeting these people and almost having that exchange that you would have if you met these people in person on the West Bank, and that’s something I really liked.

That makes me really happy because as I wrote it, I wanted to make sure that it was sensory. When you go to a new place, your senses overwhelm you and that’s part of the beauty of travel — and even just explicitly experiencing a neighborhood.

Our senses are still muted — literally and figuratively — because we’re online, and then when we’re out and about, we’re wearing masks, and so I really tried to be deliberate about having a creative piece that captures the sensory experience.

Speaking of senses, I did not know before reading that the Southern Theater was haunted. When I read “Ghosts and Muses,” I didn’t realize there were haunted buildings on the West Bank.

Oh, there’s many. When I started chatting with other folks from other theater companies that I hadn’t met before, they were like, “Oh my gosh, the Southern is totally haunted.” One time I was there doing the lighting rigging and there’s kids laughing upstairs; and I’ve talked to other people who don’t know each other, who have been in the Southern for separate things, and that’s what they say every time.

What would you like readers to take away from “Butterflies and Tall Bikes?”

I know that Merrie [Benasutti] talks about this a little bit in her interview where she’ll work with students who have sometimes a perception of Cedar-Riverside that is like the West Bank is unsafe, but that’s just fundamentally untrue.The West Bank is such a safe neighborhood. And there’s great restaurants and there’s great people and there’s amazing art. I think if people can read this book and feel a little bit like a regular and come to the West Bank and support the businesses and break that barrier a little bit, that’s great.

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College Kitchen: Summertime cocktails

Hey, you. Yeah, you. You deserve a drink.

With the end of the semester soon approaching, a countrywide rollout of vaccinations and the thought that, soon enough, we’ll be able to safely gather with friends and family — that’s reason enough for celebration.

Here are three summer drinks to get you in a convivial spirit, ready for the summertime.

Berry Bliss

• 1 egg white (for a vegan option, use 1 ounce aquafaba, the liquid from garbanzo beans)
• 1 ounce lemon juice
• 1 ounce berry simple syrup (blackberry or raspberry preferred)
• 2 ounces gin

In a cocktail shaker that does not have ice in it, add your egg white or aquafaba, lemon juice, berry simple syrup and gin. Shake without ice for 30 seconds. Once the mixture has a foamy top, add a few ice cubes and shake again. Once the shaker is significantly colder to the touch — another 20-30 seconds — your cocktail is ready.
Pour into a glass of your choice and garnish with a berry and lemon slice. Enjoy!

Sweet & Smoky Escape

• 1 ounce Liber & Co. Tropical Passion fruit Syrup (can be found at Surdyk’s Liquor & Cheese Shop in northeast Minneapolis)
• 1 ounce citrus juice (orange or lemon preferred)
• 1 ounce triple sec or another orange liqueur
• 1 ½ ounces mezcal or tequila
• Tonic or seltzer water for topping
• Tajín for garnish

Run a lemon or orange wedge around the rim of your glass, then coat the rim with Tajín. Set the glass aside.
In a cocktail shaker, add ice, passion fruit syrup, citrus juice, orange liqueur and your choice of mezcal or tequila. Shake for 30 seconds.
Place a few ice cubes into your glass. Pour the drink in the glass, and enjoy.

Frozen Berry Margarita

• 1 cup margarita mix
• 4 ounces tequila (if margarita mix doesn’t come with tequila)
• 1 cup frozen berries
• ½ cup ice
• 1 tablespoon sugar
• ¼ cup lime juice
• Coarse salt for rim of glass

In a blender, add your margarita mix, tequila, berries, ice and lime juice. Blend until smooth.
Run a lime wedge around the rim of a glass. Coat your glass with salt. Pour your mixture into the glass, and enjoy.

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Sharing Food: Onigiri, tamagoyaki and miso soup

Whenever Emma Heverly visits family in Japan, she knows there’s onigiri waiting for her.

After landing at the Narita International Airport as a kid, she’d await her grandparent’s arrival. With them, they’d bring a big plastic bag filled with treats — katsu sandos, Kinoko No Yamas, green teas — but the most nostalgic food of all came in the form of a neat, nori-wrapped rice ball called onigiri. As they made the two-hour drive from the airport to their home in Kokubunji, Emma would indulge herself in these treats, onigiri especially.

“We’d sit there and just eat ourselves to death. Not even because we were hungry, but just because it was comforting and it felt like you came home,” Heverly, a member of the Japanese Student Association (JSA), said.

At the JSA’s Sawakai Party on Friday, March 26, members prepared onigiri, as well as tamagoyaki and miso soup.

In Japanese, “sawakai” means “tea party.” Before COVID-19, JSA (formerly J-Cafe, but they recently merged with the pre-existing JSA in early January) would host bi-weekly gatherings that centered around food, art, language and culture. The events turned virtual once the pandemic hit, and the sawakai continued.

Members of the group gathered their ingredients and congregated on Zoom to cook miso soup, tamagoyaki and onigiri together while they were physically apart. For two hours, they balled short grain rice for onigiri, chopped scallions for miso soup and whisked eggs into tamagoyaki.

To the members of JSA, these foods transport them back to their fondest memories of Japan; whether it’s the knowledge that an onigiri awaits Heverly’s arrival, the first bowl of miso soup JSA co-president Kayla Lovegren shared with her host family when she studied abroad, or external vice president Lilly Thach assembling the rice ball with her fellow kindergarteners as a young girl.

Onigiri is a rice ball, sometimes stuffed with filling, sometimes triangular, that Heverley equated to “Japanese peanut butter and jelly.” As a kid, she’d constantly eat salmon or tuna mayo-filled onigiri, and her favorite onigiri always came from Japanese convenience stores, where they came meticulously wrapped with crispy sheets of nori, according to Heverly.

Tamagoyaki is a fluffy, rolled omelet that uses a special cooking method and makiyakinabe pan to create a square-shaped omelet. While the makiyakinabe is traditionally used to make tamagoyaki, a circular pan works just as well if you don’t have a square pan on hand.

“It sounds super simple, but it’s different from the way Americans cook eggs because it’s fluffier and there’s more of an umami flavor to it,” Thach said.

Miso soup, a staple in Japanese cuisine, uses fermented soybean paste, tofu and greens, and is eaten with breakfast, lunch and dinner in Japan.

Lovegren studied abroad in Japan as a 16-year-old. She was filled with nerves during her first night in the town of Saiki, located in the coastal Ōita Prefecture on Kyushu Island. As she sat down with her host family to eat miso soup and speak Japanese, it began to feel like home.

“Once things were laid out on the table and we were conversing back and forth, it really felt like family,” Lovegren said. “And my [host] mom’s cooking was of course amazing and yummy.”

Miso soup

Ingredients

– 2 cup of dashi stock, vegetable stock, or other stock of your choosing
– 1-2 tablespoons miso paste
– ¼ cup hot water
– 1 stalk of spring onions, chopped
– Nori
– Optional addition of tofu and leafy greens

Heat stock in a pan. In a small bowl with ¼ cup hot water, stir together the miso paste and the water to create a smoother mixture. Add the mixture into the pot.
As the soup simmers, add your nori, as well as tofu and other greens if you are using them. Ladle into bowls, and sprinkle with green onion.

Tamagoyaki

Ingredients

– ⅛ teaspoon dashi powder
– ⅛ teaspoon salt
– ¼ teaspoon soy sauce
– ½ tablespoon sugar
– ¼ cup water
– 2 eggs
– oil, for brushing

In a small bowl, combine the dashi, salt, soy sauce, sugar, and water. Mix until everything is dissolved.
In a medium bowl, beat the eggs and add the seasoning mixture. Mix until well-combined.
Heat a tamagoyaki pan over medium-high heat. Brush a thin layer of oil on the pan.
Pour a third of the egg mixture into the pan and quickly swirl to cover the entire pan. When the egg is half-set, gently roll the egg.
With the rolled egg still in the pan, pour in another third of the egg mixture. Lift up the rolled egg and let the mixture flow under it. When the egg is half-set, roll the omelette toward you. Repeat with the rest of the egg mixture.
Slice into bite-sized pieces.
Enjoy!

Onigiri

Ingredients

– 1 cup of steamed short-grain sushi rice
– 1 sheet of nori, cut into long strips
– Salt to taste
– 3 tablespoons of sesame seeds or furikake for decoration
– Optional filling of chopped tuna or salmon mixed with Kewpie mayo

Separate the rice into three equal parts. Using plastic gloves, or dipping your hands in water and salt so that the rice doesn’t stick, take one portion of the rice, cupping one hand and flattening the other to create a triangular shape. Flatten the sides once the triangular shape is achieved for a uniform look. If you’re making onigiri with a filling, separate the rice into two, adding the filling to the center, and then close the cup with another layer of rice and form into a triangular shape.
Wrap the nori around the bottom of the onigiri. Sprinkle with sesame seeds and enjoy.

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