Hi guys! Looking for experienced cleaners or type-setters to help with the .
Last year I asked Akimi-san to teach me cooking.
We had a talk over the phone recently to discuss exactly what type of cooking sheâd be teaching me.
The type of dishes Iâd bring out at a house party? Or did I want her to teach me home cooking instead?
In the end I chose the latter without hesitation.
I wasnât exactly planning on too many house parties, and even if I was I could just ask for catering services.
On the other hand, if I was ever going to live alone, or get married and live without a maid, I was going to need to know how to cook.
Plus, in the short term I wanted something like Aoi-chan had! She was cooking meals for her boyfriend right now!
Then she asked if I wanted to learn j.a.panese dishes or Western dishes, so I went with the former for now.
If I got down basic traditional stuff like nimono would it make me seem more filial and down-to-earth?
Nimono is a category of traditional stewed recipes. Pictured above is a nitsuke dish, specifically black halibut nitsuke.
Well, whatever else aside I liked j.a.panese foods. That was the biggest reason.
Anyway, after getting all of this sorted out eventually I visited her house.
âWelcome, Reika-san.â
âAkimi-san, gokigenâyoh. I will be in your care today.â
I had heard that her family was well-off, and now it showed.
Her house was both newly built and large.
âPlease just make yourself at home. My father is out playing golf, and my mother is having lunch out with her friends right now.â
âThank you.â
After handing over my gift to her I followed Akimi-san into the house.
âJust like we discussed, first Iâll have you try some of my food, and then if you like it Iâll teach you how to make it. Does that sound okay?â
âYes.â
âTheyâre all just simple dishes today. Would you like to try them now?â
âMy, you prepared them in advanced for me?â
âYes. Itâs just simple soups and side dishes though.â
She guided me into her large living room where a number of dishes sat ready.
Whoa! They looked good.
But for some reason there were two of everything.
âTheyâre the same dishes but I prepared them in different ways.â
âDifferent ways?â
âYes. Iâ¦â
âA guest, Akimi?â called a male voice.
Turning around, I saw a familiar face enter the dining room.
It was the guy who I exacted demiglace revenge on for being rude to Akimi-san, Demiglace!
âOniisamaâ¦â
âOniisama!?â
Demiglace was Akimi-sanâs oniisan!?
No way!
I framed him with demiglace without even knowing who he was!?
âYou must be Reika-san from the Kisshouin family.â
âY-Yes. Forgive my late introduction. I am Kisshouin Reika. Thank you for having me today.â
âWhat brings you to our home, Reika-san?â
âAkimi-san was going to teach me cooking today.â
âCooking? Akimi?â
Demiglace, now identified as Akimi-sanâs oniisan, looked at the dishes on the table only to frown.
âAkimi, donât tell me you were planning on teaching Reika-san how to cook menial dishes like these.â
Hah?
I looked at the table.
There was chikuzenni, buridaikon, and shiraae with spinach and fried tofu.
Buri Daikon (ã¶ãå¤§æ ¹) is simmered yellowtail (buri) and daikon radish in a seasoned broth. A cheap winter dish.Chikuzenni (çåç ® chikuzen-ni) is a dish that originated from northern Kyushu, j.a.pan, made of braised chicken and vegetables.Shiraae (ç½åã) tofu paste mixed with spinach and fried tofu.
âYou brought out these lowly meals for the daughter of the Kisshouin family? What the h.e.l.l were you thinking.â
âWait-â
Akimi-san hung her head sadly.
âPlease wait. I asked her for this, and these are my favourite dishes. Is there something wrong with buridaikon? Eating fresh seasonal ingredients is the height of luxury!â
Huh. Yellowtail was in season, right�
I swear I heard somewhere that yellowtail was in winterâ¦
G.o.ds above, please let me have been right.
âWell, if you say so, Reika-san,â he said hesitantly, before continuing. âBut Akimi, are you even fit to teach somebody like Reika-san? You should be getting her to teach you manners and grace instead.â
âIn my eyes, Akimi-san is already a splendid lady,â I countered.
Akimi-san is curling up here, so could you go away already?
âWell then, I have plans, so please excuse me Reika-san.â
Maybe my prayers had worked because Demi-brother left after excusing himself.
ââ¦Sorry, Reika-san. I put you through something unpleasant.â
âNothing of the sort! But I had no idea that man was your oniisamaâ¦â
âYes⦠It seems that he detests me for being so fat and unsightlyâ¦â
ââ¦â
But demi-brother seemed pretty plump himself.
Her okaasama was round too, so maybe the Narutomi family was just like that.
âMore importantly, Iâll have go reheat the food. I only hope it suits you.â
âI look forward to it.â
Right.
Now that the rude interlopers were gone, it was time to get back to the food sampling.
Akimi-san came back with the reheated food and placed it in front of me.
âThe reason I actually have two of each is because Iâve made them different ways. One is made with a standard recipe and proper ingredients, while the other is the kind of commonersâ flavour that I prefer. I thought it would help to see what you liked.â
âI see. Then may I help myself?â
âPlease do.â
I began with some of the miso soup with green onions and tofu.
Mn, yummy!
So this was the standard one.
Next was her commoner recipe, huh.
Ohâ¦
âWhatâs wrong, Reika-san?â
This tasted like⦠the way Mum used to make itâ¦
âReika-san?â
Oh no, my eyes were tearing up.
It was Mumâs miso soup.
âReika-san⦠Was it not to your tasteâ¦?â
ââ¦No. It was⦠very delicious.â
âReally? You donât have to force yourself. I didnât use much katsuobushi in this one so it might not taste that goodâ¦â
âNo. Please teach me how to make it like this.â
âThis one? Are you sure it isnât too common tasting for you?â
âPlease.â
I lowered my head to her.
I never had Mum teach me so I was sure Iâd never get to eat it again.
But now the taste was almost in reach.
If I learnt how to make Akimi-sanâs food, then perhaps one day I could recreate Mumâs.
That was my goal now.
âPlease.â
âWell, if you insistâ¦â
In the end, all of the side dishes were delicious.
And unsurprisingly, the commoner versions were nostalgic.
Mn.
Iâd definitely go with those ones.
Akimi-san seemed a little taken aback when I asked though.
âI never would have imagined that youâd prefer these ones. It makes me happy though.â
âIs this how you normally cook these dishes?â
âOh no, when my family is eating I use the expensive ones,â she smiled. âItâs embarra.s.sing, but my family are nouveau riche. Did you know?â
Oh, come to think of it, her father had built his fortune with real estate, hadnât heâ¦
âIn my grandmotherâs generation we were an average farming family in the outskirts of the city. It was nothing but mountains and fields and countryside where we lived, but the value of the land jumped up with suburban planning, so the money from that helped my fatherâs business.â
âI see.â
âWhen my brother and I were born, our family was already wealthy. We grew up in luxury. But my grandmother still kept her habits of economising, or being a poor person if you like.â
âRight.â
âMy brother often tells me this too, but Iâve been clumsy since I was little. Sometimes other children would call me an upstart as well, so whenever that happened Iâd run crying to my grandmotherâs house.â
âMyâ¦â
âAfter helping her cook for a while, I grew to love cooking as well. I mentioned earlier though that my grandmotherâs habits were set. She was stingy with her cooking too.â
âStingy?â
âYes. She was quite stingy when making broth. She wouldnât use much stock base, and even made second or third brew, you know?â
âI see.â
Second or third brew�
I just nodded like I knew what she was talking about.
âYou might find this hard to believe but you can actually use the katsuobushi to make furikake afterwards. You can also actually eat the leaves of the daikon and turnip, and even grow them yourself.â
âGrow them?â
âYes. You water them near the top and theyâll start to grow leaves.â
Oh!
Mum used to do that in the kitchen!
For a while I thought it was for decoration or something.
âWhen I cook for others Iâm generous with ingredients. But Iâd still like to cherish the taste of my grandmotherâs cooking too. I think this is actually what food is like in normal households, you know?â
âI understand.â
Come to think of it, at home I sometimes saw the cook fill the entire pot full of katsuobushi.
I never saw Mum do that in my old life though.
Thinking about it, Mum had been pretty stingy herself, hadnât she.
Her food was yummy though.
âHuhu. I never would have thought a genuine ojousama like you would have picked these ones though. Obaachan might be happy to hear that.â
âI will be in your care, Sensei.â
âGosh, donât call me that.â
Akimi-san was a genuinely good person.
If I was in her position Iâd never admit that I was from an upstart family.
I was convinced now. Akimi-san would never laugh if I admitted I couldnât really use a kitchen knife.
âAkimi-san, the truth is, um, I cannot even cut vegetables with a knife properlyâ¦â
And I was just pretending before, so please tell me what that second broth thing is.