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October — “Chestnuts”

I still remember going chestnut picking when I was a kid.

They were probably wild mountain chestnuts—small ones wrapped in spiky burrs that hurt when you touched them. I used to nudge the burrs open with my shoe and pick the nuts out carefully.

Years later, I got to help with the harvest in the chestnut hills of Tamba. That’s when I learned something interesting: a chestnut tree can’t bear fruit on its own. You need at least two different varieties planted close together. And just like people, some trees get along better than others. Farmers try different combinations—an early-ripening type with a late one, for example—to see what works best.

My favorite way to eat chestnuts is the simplest—”kuri gohan,” chestnut rice.

You just peel the chestnuts, cut them into small pieces, and cook them with freshly rinsed rice. Add about a tablespoon of mirin, and it really brings out their natural sweetness. I like to sprinkle a little black sesame and salt on top. Every bite of that comforting bowl of rice takes me right back to the autumn hills of Tamba.

Author

The Head of Kinsaryu
CEO and Executive Chef of Yanagihara Cooking School
Ph.D. in Fermentation Science and Technology

I was born in Tokyo into a family specializing in the Kinsaryu culinary discipline. Kinsaryu has been passed on from generation to generation since the Edo period (1800’s) and is a cuisine that specializes in the cooking technique of Edo (former Tokyo).
  
I’ve been teaching and researching ‘washoku’ (Japanese cuisine) and ‘kaiseki’ (traditional cuisines served at tea ceremony) at Yanagihara Cooking School in Akasaka, Tokyo, for over 20 years now.

I also oversee cooking for TV shows, like NHK's ‘taiga’ (or period) dramas and others, to help them present culinary details accurately. In 2015, I was honored to be named a Cultural Exchange Ambassador by the Agency for Cultural Affairs of Japan, and in 2018, I became an ambassador for promoting Japanese food for the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. It’s been a joy spreading the word about what washoku has to offer around the world!

My specialty is Edo-period food culture and Japanese cuisine/culture, plus food education for children. I enjoy writing cookbooks and giving speeches on washoku.