Cooking with Harumi Kurihara Print E-mail
July 2006

Harumi KuriharaHarumi Kurihara descended in a roomy Tribeca loft on a crisp April morning during her recent book tour across the U.S. to give me a cooking lesson. And while cooking times and tablespoons versus teaspoons consumed my mind, I was quickly put at ease as Kurihara entered the room. Under the spring breeze and tepid sun, the reigning queen of Japan’s culinary empire exuded a calming effect in the midst of the bustling city.

Dubbed as Japan’s Martha Stewart by the English media, the title only befits her entrepreneurial spirit and soaring popularity at home and abroad.

 With her approachable, mother-like presence, the congenial 59-year-old demystifies the cult of celebrity cooking as she reveals her graceful balancing act as a renowned chef, restaurateur, lifestyle guru and above all, a merry wife and caring mother of two.

Surprisingly, Kurihara says her rise to success was purely accidental.

Married to Reiji Kurihara, a renowned Japanese newscaster, the humble housewife with an ardent passion for good cooking and fresh ingredients would often entertain guests from Japan’s media powerhouses. Her mouth-watering dishes quickly won over the taste buds of TV producers and created a media frenzy. These informal trials landed her an appearance 23 years ago on Fuji television’s popular cooking show “Yu Shoku Banzai.”

“I never imagined becoming a professional one day. Cooking has always been my calling, and I am overwhelmed with joy when people share delicious meals together. Food can work magic and reinforce human bonds,” Kurihara says.

Harumi Kurihara's BookSince then, she has created more than 4,000 original recipes, sold seven million copies of her cookbooks and become a national sensation with hordes of Japanese women following her simple cooking philosophies and home décor advice.  

Born in the small seaside village of Shimoda in Shizuoka, the successful entrepreneur is still amazed by what an ordinary housewife can achieve if she steps out of her domestic comfort zone and ventures into the corporate arena. “Family has always been my priority. I’m somewhat traditional in thinking and glad to have the support from my husband to fulfill my culinary potential,” she says.

As the family matriarch, she rules her domestic kingdom — which includes a chain of housewares stores, an affordable gourmet cookware line and more than 20 cookbooks —with the help of her two adult sons.

Kurihara’s kitchen is the quintessential melting pot of East and West, where a marriage of Japanese taste and Western presentation often takes place. The widely traveled chef draws upon culinary influences from Southeast Asia to Italy and from the Middle East to America, creating fusion dishes such as Japanese-style green risotto, tuna carpaccio and an eclectic array of tofu delicacies, from tofu steak, tofu and grounded pork kebabs to tofu and avocado dressing and tofu with basil and Gorgonzola dressing, making the plain, nutritious squares more appealing.

Voted the best cookbook of 2004 at the Gourmand World Cookbook Awards, beating out entries from 67 countries, her first English title “Harumi’s Japanese Cooking” (Berkeley, $27.95) aims to open a new door to modern Japanese home cooking for Westerners who are often deterred by a foreign language, a foreign food culture and hard-to-find ingredients.

And while the cookbook honors further confirm Kurihara’s celebrity chef status, she does not exhibit spectacular showmanship like Martin Yan’s signature cleaver-chopping stunts. Kurihara believes soul food resonates better among the audience. “I think friendly, natural and at home feeling is more engaging. People often miss the warm atmosphere of home cooking, not the fancy restaurant ones,” she says.

Kurihara, however, does emphasize the need for food presentation. She says first impressions are often lasting. “It goes beyond the taste. People will appreciate the effort behind and it will give them more insight of your personality as well.”

With that, I put my pen aside and was ready to give it my best effort. I rolled out a sushi mat for a hands-on cooking session, to create the no-frills but delectable Ura Maki Zushi, with the master herself.

Harumi Kurihara's recipeRECIPES

Ura Maki Zushi (inside-out roll)

Place ½ sheet of nori on nonstick parchment paper and evenly spread a thin layer of fresh sushi rice across it (don’t leave the edges free on this one). Carefully turn it over so the nori is facing up and add the ingredients. For this roll, use crab stick (about 8 oz.), avocado and shiso leaves.

Use mayonnaise instead of wasabi and dab on top of the ingredients. Roll carefully and evenly away from you.

Put some toasted sesame seeds on a plate and roll the sushi in them so the roll is well coated.

Using a sharp knife, cut into about 1-inch pieces and serve.

 

 

 

Harumi Kurihara RecipeBite-size Steak Pieces with Japanese Vegetables (Koro Koro Steak Tataki fu)

This original recipe uses many Japanese vegetable ingredients but if you cannot find some of them then use what you have locally such as watercress, cilantro, parsley or radish.

(Serves 4)

About 2 lbs sirloin steaks (3/4 inch thick if possible)
Sunflower oil or vegetable oil for cooking
2 tablespoons finely chopped ginger
¼ cup chopped myoga, if available
¼ cup spring onions, chopped
¼ cup chopped celery
Small handful shredded shiso leaves or a mix of
fresh basil and mint leaves, to taste
Dashi shoyu sauce, to taste (see ingredient notes)
Grated daikon, if available

Ingredient Notes:

Dashi shoyu is a mixture of dashi (fish stock) and soy sauce (half and half). It is heated and then allowed to cool before use. If you cannot make you own dashi, use good quality fish stock. 

Preparation 

Cut the steak into bite-size pieces. Heat the oil in a ridged griddle pan or frying pan and quickly cook the steak cubes, browning on all sides. Mix the chopped vegetables, except the daikon, together. When the steak is cooked to your liking, place it on a serving dish with the chopped vegetables on top. Make the dashi shoyu sauce and pour it on the steaks. Give everyone a small plate and eat with grated daikon.

 

Recipes and food pictdures from “Harumi’s Home Cooking” (Berkeley Publishing, $27.95)
*First photo by Harald Franzen

 

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