dorchadas: (Chicago)
[personal profile] dorchadas
At my Japanese lesson last Tuesday, Aya-sensei gave me a flier from a giant stack she was carrying around. Moth, the shop where she works at part-time, was having a huge sale, she explained, and she invited us to come. And we did.

When I described the store's decor to [twitter.com profile] slarnos, all light wood and airy spaces filled with Japanese and Nordic goods, clothesracks against the walls filled with monochromes, browns, and blues, a table in the center of the store covered in small candles, pots, and cups, he said that it sounded like a store for people who live inside magazine photoshoots. I myself had used the phrase "Kinfolk-ass store" to describe it, so I can't and won't dispute his claim. But there was a lot of tableware I'd love to have, and I did buy two things. The first is a set of cerulean dishes made by a Japanese designer whose name I didn't get. Aya-sensei told me that he was a pain to work with, requiring a lot of reassurance before he'd agree to sell his wares overseas, and that he had been ignoring the emails asking about getting further stock. The second was another matcha bowl:

Moth matcha bowl
I took a dozen photos and can't get it to focus perfectly, but this one shows the colors.

I don't know much about the performance of tea ceremony, but I do know how to make matcha. Right now we only have a single black bowl, but I already like the aesthetics on this one too. The black allows the matcha to contrast strongly, but the green here should be a good compliment.

The store's owner told me that the bowl was part of a collection by a Finnish woman married to a Japanese man. She also wrote a cookbook where she made all the tableware for the photos herself, but it's only in Finnish, of which I read none, though the photography is gorgeous. It's called 桜 Sakura: Japanilainen keittokirja (Sakura: Japanese cookbook). We also talked a bit about Japanese--the owner is studying because her job involves speaking to Japanese vendors and right now she has Aya-sensei do most of the go-between, but since she owns a store, she doesn't have as much time as she likes to actually study. She asked me how my Japanese was and I said, "I get by," and was pleasantly surprised when Aya-sensei took objection to my characterization. I suppose that is a little over-modest. I am reading a novel, after all. Emoji La

After buying those dishes and [personal profile] schoolpsychnerd getting a pair of work heels she can leave at school on massive sale (60% off, I think), we said goodbye, turned down Aya-sensei's invitation to go to a party a friend of hers who owns a restaurant was throwing to celebrate their one-year anniversary since we had other plans, and went north up to the Bristol. Aya-sensei also recommended that to me a while ago, and since it was within walking distance of the Moth, it was our chance.

A lot of the entrées contained pork or shellfish, which [personal profile] schoolpsychnerd and I don't eat for religious reasons, but there were a bunch of appetizers that were edible so we ordered a selection of those. Duck fat fries, chicken liver mousse topped with walnuts, roasted cauliflower with orange, and whipped feta with spices.

The Bristol Chicken liver mousseThe Bristol roasted cauliflower
Left: chicken mousse. Right: roasted cauliflower.

Delicious. And still too much food--I wouldn't have given up the duck fat fries, but there were about twice as many as we needed to have. Despite that, I managed to save enough room in my auxiliary dessert stomach to order the flourless chocolate cake that [personal profile] schoolpsychnerd noticed on the chalkboard behind me. It was good, but not as good as the one she makes.

After dinner we hopped on the bus and went north to [livejournal.com profile] tropicanaomega's house to help her with a secret project related to DragonCon which I'll edit into this post next weekend once the plan is in motion! Then we went home and [personal profile] schoolpsychnerd napped next to me on the couch while I watched Jeremy Parish play ten minutes of G.I. Joe: the Atlantis Factor before getting annoyed and switching to Super Mario Bros. 3. And now, after getting our shopping done, I'm playing Legend of Zelda: the Minish Cap and [personal profile] schoolpsychnerd is resting and working on her meals for the week.

Hope everyone is having a good weekend!
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