Japan – a place of mystery and joy and…salmonella.

What kind of moron eats raw chicken? This kind of moron. Japan will do that to you. But it will also charm and mystify you, and no wonder people love this place so much.

Twenty years ago, Janine and I packed up and moved to Japan, and I still consider it one of the best decisions we ever made. We learned how to observe the world around us and then adapt to what we saw. We experienced what it’s like to be illiterate and almost completely ignorant of virtually every cultural norm. As fish out of water experiences go, this was up there. You might say it was a raw fish out of water experience.

We made it work. We made friends, learned a little Japanese, and our daughter was born here. I was really excited about coming back.

Our first stop was Kobe, where my friend Paul and his better half Megumi had invited us to visit. Paul and I worked together for several years, and apart from being one of the nicest guys I know, he’s a world class eater. Paul and I ate sheep’s head in Morocco and bushrat in Ghana, so when Paul promises a good time, he means it. Paul had warned that we’d eat our way through Kobe, and while I’d be glad to see him even if he were a celiac vegan, I have to confess I was especially excited.

Our first stop was a neighborhood izakaya called Shindo, that had a total of maybe fifteen seats. Izakayas are casual pubs that serve food, and they are generally considered to be places where the drinking is more important than the eating. This izakaya was certainly an exception. We had plate after plate of Japanese delights. There was impeccable octopus, perfect tempura, sashimi of fugu (you know, the poisonous puffer fish), eel, and all manner of other goodies. While the eating was great, so was the drinking. There was no shortage of exceptional sakes – a lot of the sake we have in the states is godawful, but boy do they make some nice stuff here. We had crisp dry sakes and sweet flowery sakes. Paul got us off to a very good start.

We kicked off our tour of foods you shouldn't eat with a little fugu (L), which if prepared incorrectly is poisonous.

We kicked off our tour of foods you shouldn’t eat with a little fugu (L), which if prepared incorrectly is poisonous.

Paul couldn’t get a reservation at one of his favorite joints the next night, so Megumi made nabe at home, which turned out to be way better than anything we could have had anywhere. Nabe is a big stew of whatever you feel like throwing in the pot. Megumi’s nabe was simple but spectacular. At the risk of getting it wrong, I think it went something like this: Start with a pot of hot water in which you steep a sachet of dashi mix. Dashi is a combination of dried bonito flakes and edible kelp called Konbu, which makes a smoky, fishy base for the soup. Then you add some miso, aromatics like onion and maybe some carrots, and whatever else strikes your fancy. Megumi adds kimchi and I think some kind of red pepper flakes for spice. Once the soup base has simmered for a bit, it goes in a big ceramic pot that sits on a portable burner in the middle of the table, where you throw in hunks of whatever you find in your fridge, which in Japan can be napa cabbage, shitake mushrooms, burdock, taro root, tofu, daikon, and strips of shaved pork shoulder or some other small amounts of meat. It was simply glorious. I had forgotten how easy and satisfying nabe was and I can’t wait to put it in the rotation when we get home. I may even have to spring for a proper nabe pot for the sake of verisimilitude.

A glorious pot of Japanese stew, right before we started cooking.

A glorious pot of Japanese stew, right before we started cooking.

On our last night in Kobe, Paul tried to kill me. We went to his favorite yakitori restaurant. These are humble little places where the main event is grilled meat on a stick. Traditional yakitori places like this one just serve chicken, but others branch out into vegetables, beef, or pork. We had pretty much every part of the chicken – thighs, breast, liver, and heart-stopping rolled up tubes of grilled chicken skin. This was all quite tame when Paul noted that one of the specialties of the house was chicken sashimi. Yes, kids, they serve raw chicken at this place. Don’t worry, Paul advised, the chickens are treated like spoiled children and kept in pristine conditions and it’s perfectly safe. I didn’t take much convincing. There was no way I was passing up the chance to add raw chicken to my list of culinary conquests.

Raw chicken - it's what's for dinner! (It seemed like a good idea at the time, although I don't know why.)

Raw chicken – it’s what’s for dinner! (It seemed like a good idea at the time, although I don’t know why.)

So? It was very mild, almost like yellowtail or some other gently tasting sushi. Little did I know that three days later I would spend the night doubled over with cramps and shaking with chills. Was it the raw chicken? I’ll never know (Paul was none the worse for wear), but I’ll always wonder.

On our last day in Kobe, Paul and I went to a preseason baseball game between the local Hanshin Tigers and the Saitama Lions. Japanese baseball is like American baseball being watched by South American soccer fans. They sing songs for each player, spend much of the game on their feet, and generally whoop it up.

There are other things to love about Japanese baseball, like the beer. Well, the beer is lousy, but the beer sellers are as entertaining as the game. Beer is sold by young women who schlep around a thirty pound pony keg on their backs and then dispense the beer at your seat. To market their product, they walk to the front of the aisle, bow, raise one hand, and sing “who would like some beer?” in a particularly nasal tone. I felt bad for them because it was a preseason game and the stadium was mostly empty and the kegs didn’t seem to be emptying terribly quickly. Since the people in our section (as opposed to the boosters’ section in the bleacher) were eerily quiet, as a result, at some points the most prominent sound in the stadium was dozens, if not scores, of young women singing “who would like some beer” in a way that would make adnoid surgeons salivate.

Lousy beer poured with gusto.

Lousy beer poured with gusto.

We were situated in prime foul ball territory and our chances of snagging a ball were improved by two important factors – there weren’t many people in the stands, and when a foul ball was hit into the stands, the fans cowered in fear. Nobody seemed to want to catch a foul ball. Wouldn’t you know it, a ball came in our direction and not a single fan made a move for it. Many just stared at the thing, as if wondering what that foreign object was that bounced down the aisle. When it stopped rolling, I just picked it up.

What a country!

What a country!

I love this place!

Fat penguins, getting licked by a joey and a perfect meal – more glories from Melbourne.

Our visit to Australia was admittedly minimalist. We took a country that is almost 8 million square miles and reduced it to the 550 miles from Sydney to Melbourne. How dare we?

Yes, we saw a few kangaroos on our little road trip, but where were the cuddly koalas? What about the cute little joeys? We needed to add more authentic Australian wildlife to our itinerary. And while we’re at it, why not throw in some waddly little penguins for good measure?

Why do we love penguins so much? Is it the funny walk? The tuxedo? Their excellent performance in Madagascar? I can’t say for sure, but penguins sure are fun.

They’re also very reliable. Every night at sundown, the penguins of Phillip Island, which is about a two hour drive from Melbourne (driven with amazing good humor by our friend David Morley, who, with his wife Trish, made sure that we felt very welcome in Melbourne), put on a performance that is hard to beat. They emerge from the ocean in groups of twenty or so, mill about on the beach for five or ten minutes, and then waddle off to their burrows, which can be quite a distance away. There are around a thousand penguins in the colony there, and on any given night you can expect at least half of them to come ashore, wave by wave, like the Allied landing at Anzio.

Penguin invasion at Phillip Island

Penguin invasion at Phillip Island (taken off a postcard, since you’re not allowed to take pictures :))

At this time of year the penguins are molting – they drop their feathers and grow new ones. Once they drop their old feathers, which provide the waterproofing they need to survive in the water, they have to stay on land for a few weeks until the new ones grow in. As a result, at this time of year penguins stuff themselves so full of fish that they can barely walk. It seems, well, unseemly, to laugh at fat penguins, but it’s hard not to. Some waddle up onto shore and then promptly fall over like bowling pins. Others will take a few steps, stop, and maybe take a quick nap before continuing on their way. Some are so fat that they have to swivel their hips to achieve forward locomotion. Watching this goofy march of the penguins has to rank up there with some of my most memorable moments in wildlife.

I also got to cuddle a joey. On the way to Phillip Island, we stopped at a small wildlife sanctuary – well, kind of a petting zoo –where Janine got to pet a koala and I got to hold a baby kangaroo named William.

Janine with a kuddly koala.

Janine with a kuddly koala.

I am ever so slightly ambivalent about letting animals that should be wild get too close to humans, but I also see the educational value, especially for kids, in this approach. Anyway, little William settled into my arms for a good long snuggle. At one point he even started absent mindedly licking my finger. Now I can say I watched engorged penguins collapse on a beach and I had my finger licked by a little baby kangaroo. Viva Australia!

Little William licking my finger.

Little William licking my finger.

And now on to the gluttony portion of our program.

Before all these zany wildlife encounters, we did our best to seek out one of those gastronomic meccas that seem to dot the city. It was one of those days when the malaise had set in. We were sitting around staring at each other without the will to do much of anything. We didn’t know where to eat or how to get there. This may sound really silly in the internet age, but I’m here to tell you that it happens. Then I summoned something from deep within, hearing the faint whispers of that inspiring inner voice telling me that there’s pork belly just over the horizon with our name on it. Someone is emulsifying or sous vide-ing just for us. There are microgreens picked by monks drizzled with olive oil pressed with stones quarried from Roman ruins and rowed across the sea by Vikings. It was all out there waiting for us. We just had to lift ourselves off the couch and find it.

And find it we did, in the hipster neighborhood of Fitzroy, which once was known for mayhem and prostitution, but which is now where some of the city’s best food is found.

The Mission or Melbourne? Hipster Fitzroy.

The Mission or Melbourne? Hipster Fitzroy.

After cross referencing about three different tram maps, I figured out how to get out there. (By the way, for all its charms, Melbourne’s transit system is deeply inscrutable. It’s unclear where to buy transit cards, they charge you six bucks for the card and then you have to top it up with value, it’s mystifying when you have to tap on and tap off, and the tram maps are really lousy. And a single ride is $3.75. Bleeeccchhhh.) No matter. We arrived at a place called Saint Crispen, which brought to mind that great Henry V soliloquy (“We few, we happy few, we band of brothers…”), and very soon we knew we’d hit the yummy jackpot. We were seated at the counter and we watched the chef work the pass, checking each dish with the precision of a Swiss diamond cutter mixed with the passion of an opera singer to make sure it was just right. This was going to be good.

We started with a salad of perfect local tomatoes and lightly pickled pressed watermelon, accompanied by olives and feta cheese. This was followed by an appetizer of kangaroo tartare and thinly sliced plums, which were almost the same color as the deep red kangaroo loin. Yep, we have now not just eaten kangaroo, we’ve eaten it raw, and it was delicious. We then had crispy chicken with buttermilk foam, served with one of those science project sous vide eggs that oozes its yolk just right, and the whole affair was topped with a bit of crunchy popcorn. I know, sous vide and popcorn, how precious, but it was really, really good. The main event was roasted pork belly with really crispy slightly sticky skin sitting on a little pool of pureed burnt carrot with some orange and miso tossed in for good measure. Each dish was elegant, perfectly seasoned, and beautifully presented, and the meal moved right into one of our top five of the trip.

The next day we were taken on yet another graciously offered field trip. This time we went to a farmer’s market set on the grounds of a former convent in the suburb of Abbotsford.

Comically beautiful carrots at the Abbotsford farmer's market.

Comically beautiful carrots at the Abbotsford farmer’s market.

Our host, Loretta, is the cousin of my friend (and faithful reader) Marty, and, as with the Morleys, I was reminded how wonderful it is to see a place through a local’s eyes. We feel a bit sheepish about taking up people’s valuable time, but at the same time we’ve met so many really lovely people, like Loretta and her friend Frederica, that it assuages our guilt at least a bit.

I do hope we’ll have a chance to return the many favors before too long.

Next: A homecoming, of sorts, to Japan.