Archive for the ‘Food’ Category

NY Loves Japan: Sake & Food Fund Raising Event on 4/27/11

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

SAKAYA is proud to be a member of a coalition of NYC’s top sake and food community members that have joined together with the nonprofit organization Project by Project, to produce an unprecedented tasting event  to benefit disaster relief for the victims of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami in Japan at la.venue in Chelsea on Wednesday, April 27, 2011.   We urge you not to miss this exceptional opportunity to help those in need while enjoying over 100 different sake and sampling cuisine from 15 of the city’s finest restaurants.

For tickets and more details please visit the NY Loves Japan website.

We look forward to seeing you there!

Rick & Hiroko

la.venue
269 11th Avenue (between 27th & 28th Street)
New York, NY  10001

December 2010 Sake Tastings

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010

With the Holiday Season kicking into gear and our 3rd Anniversary coming up, we’ve tastings aplenty this month to help inspire you with holiday gift ideas.

Friday, December 3, 2010, from 6 to 8pm

Joto Sake Import Tasting

Seikyo Omachi Junmai Ginjo & Seikyo Junmai (Hiroshima)


Saturday, December 4, 2010, from 5 to 7pm

Sake and Chocolate Tasting

Kagatobi Junmai Ginjo (Ishikawa) & Ume no Yado Umeshu (Nara)

Dark Chocolate and Sake Chocolate Truffle by Xocolatti


Friday, December 10, 2010, 6 to 8pm

SAKAYA 3rd Year Anniversary Party


Saturday, December 11, 2010, 5 to 7pm

SAKAYA 3rd Year Anniversary Party


Friday, December 17, 2010, 6 to 8pm

World Sake Import Sake Tasting

Tedorigawa “Kinka” Daiginjo Namazake (Ishikawa)


Saturday, December 18, 2010, 5 to 7pm

Vine Connection Sake Tasting

Sato no Homare “Pride of the Village” Junmai Ginjo (Ibaraki)

Dirt Candy Sake Dinner

Monday, May 24th, 2010


Dirt Candy menu

Dirt CandyWe had the privilege of collaborating with our friends at neighboring vegetarian restaurant Dirt Candy on a special sake dinner on Thursday,  May 20.  It was the first time that we’ve worked with a restaurant and we’re happy to report that the dinner (which sold out within hours after it’s announcement) andRick at Dirt Candy sake dinner sake pairings with each dish were enjoyed by both seatings of enthusiastic diners.  After starting off with a “snack” of jalapeno hush puppies paired with the dry style  Dewazakura Tobiroku sparkling sake, guests selected an Appetizer,  Entree, and Dessert each of which was accompanied by a complementing sake pre-selected by SAKAYA.

At each seating, Rick gave a brief introduction to premium sake and highlighted the general idea behind the selection of the evening’s  food friendly sake.   Diners’ questions and comments were then sought and answered throughout the evening as they arose.

Rick, Amanda, HirokoWe would like to express our profound appreciation to Chef Amanda Cohen of Dirt Candy for inviting us to work with her and her staff.  It was a wonderful experience for us and we hope that it has created some new excitement about premium sake.  We also highly recommend that you visit the restaurant to enjoy Amanda’s amazing food!

Dirt Candy Appetizers

Dirt Candy Entrees

Dirt Candy Dessert

Sake Dinner with Dirt Candy

Monday, May 10th, 2010

If you think vegetarian restaurants are boring,  you’re in store for a delightful surprise when you visit one of our favorite restaurants, Dirt Candy.  The immensely talented chef owner Amanda Cohen defies convention and skeptics with her delicious, soul satisfying food created entirely from fresh seasonal ingredients that will entice food lovers both vegetarian and otherwise.

As fans of the restaurant we were delighted when Amanda invited us to collaborate on a sake dinner pairing her spring menu with matching premium sake from SAKAYA.  We are happy to announce Dirt Candy’s  sake dinner on May 20.

Click here for details.  We’ll be there to share some sake basics and discuss the pairings so please join us for some great food, fun, and sake!

Dirt Candy
430 E. 9th Street
New York, NY 10009
212.228.7732
www.dirtcandynyc.com

Cooking with Dassai 23

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Sake lovers might not want to miss the rare opportunity to taste Japanese dishes made using Dassai 23 sake kasu (the lees or solids that are left after the sake is pressed from the fermented mash).  On Tuesday, November 24,  a tasting at The Japanese Culinary Center will feature sake kasu-marinated black cod and chicken as well as a salmon sake kasu nabe (hot pot).  Attendees will receive a free package of sake kasu for at home use.

For more details please visit the Japanese Culinary Center website.

Summer Surprise: Heirloom Tomatoes and Yamahai

Friday, August 21st, 2009

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August is the height of tomato season so we’ve been indulging ourselves at every opportunity. Due to several factors including a wet June and July, there has been much discussion and angst about a blight affecting much of the tomato crop in the Northeast this year. The result has been a surge in price, particularly with heirloom tomatoes. Current prices at the Union Square Greenmarket range from $6 to $8 per pound. Because we look forward to this late summer treat so much and want to support the farmers in their hour of need, we continue to buy them but are more careful about weighing them before we buy.

However, even the high price has not discouraged us from purchasing our beloved summer favorite heirloom tomatoes. This year, we experimented with pairing our tomatoes with different types of sake. Since tomatoes have an abundance of umami, we thought that there would be a natural affinity for an umami-laden Yamahai junmai sake. For our choice of Yamahai, we decided on Kuroobi Do Do Yamahai Junmai from Fukumitsuya brewery in Ishikawa prefecture. Usually, we like to warm this sake to further awaken its earthy, rich, creamy character. But this particular food pairing, coupled with the August heat and humidity suggested that giving this brew a slight chill in the fridge was the way to go.

We were delighted but not surprised to discover that the Kuro Obi Do Do and tomatoes were a sensuous, palate-pleasing match. The pairing of the sweetness and slight acidity of tomatoes and the earthy flavor of Yamahai danced a seamless tango in our mouths. The mozzarella we had added to the salad also played perfectly off the lactic elements that are the hallmark of Yamahai sake.

So don’t wait for the fall or winter to drink Yamahai (or its cousin Kimoto) sake, its umami makes it a wonderful complement to some of summer’s best produce, locally grown tomatoes!

(For a complete selection of Yamahai and Kimoto sake please visit SAKAYA.)

Thanksgiving With Sake

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

Thanksgiving sake

For many, choosing a wine to match the diversity of dishes associated with the traditional Thanksgiving meal  poses a challenge as imposing as finding a tie/pair of shoes that matches every suit/outfit in your closet and gaining the agreement of your friends and family on the decision.  Impossible? Insane? Absolutely.  With the big day close at hand, and facing the annual beverage selection conundrum, why not take a new tack entirely?  You know what we’re about to suggest don’t you?  That’s right…

Drinking sake with Thanksgiving isn’t as unorthodox an idea as you might think.  The flavors of roast turkey, cranberry relish, and sweet potatoes all have components that pair incredibly well with a number of sake.  Kimoto and yamahai sake’s creamy, earthy notes  are a perfect complement to the roast turkey. We drank Hiraizumi Junmai Yamahai last year and still haven’t found a wine that was as enjoyable with this Thanksgiving centerpiece.  Likewise, a complex, compact Ginjo from Okunomatsu or a slightly rich, fruity Junmai such as Urakasumi would be perfect partners for the Sweet Potatoes in Mirin recipe that we’ve included here.   If you’re a cranberry relish fan, try the recipe below with your meal and either Chokaisan Junmai Daiginjo or Kudoki Jozu Junmai Ginjo with their clean, apple-tinged flavors.

Come visit us at SAKAYA and tell us what you’re planning to make.  We’ll be happy to offer some sake suggestions.  Make this the year  that brings the change we need to the Thanksgiving table, the change from the same old beverage of the last eight years (or so), the change to Thanksgiving with sake!

Cranberry Orange Relish  adapted from New York Times

1 cups fresh cranberries
1 oranges, pitted, peel removed from one orange
3 tablespoons maple syrup
2 tablespoons Grand Marnier
1 tablespoons sugar
1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg.

1. Wash the fresh cranberries, and grind them in a meat grinder using a fine blade or process in a food processor until the cranberries are finely chopped.
2. Cut the oranges into eighths, and grind or process until finely chopped.
3. Combine fresh cranberries, oranges, maple syrup, Grand Marnier, sugar and nutmeg; stir well, and refrigerate at least an hour but up to 3 or 4 days.

Yield: 2 cups.

Sweet Potatoes in Mirin
2  Sweet Potatoes or yams, wash well and cut into 3/4 slices
1/4 cups mirin
1/4 cups sake
1 tablespoons sugar
1-2 tablespoons soy sauce
1/4 cups water

1. Combine the sweet potatoes or yam, mirin, sake, sugar, 1 tablespoons of soy sauce and water in a small sauce pan.
2. Cover and cook over medium heat until the sweet potato is tender, about15 minute. Add a little more water if necessary.
3. Taste it and adjust seasonings.  (If it needs sauce sauce, add more.  If it needs more sugar, add more.)

Hoppin’ Down the Sake Trail…Nihonshu for Easter

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

Why not blaze a new beverage path and drink sake with Easter dinner this year! We’ve come up with seven sake to precede and accompany the traditional Easter meal.

Start things off with a fresh, lively unpasteurized sake as an aperatif to excite and prep the palate. Ichinokura Namazake (Miyagi) or Eiko Fuji Namazake (Yamagata) pair perfectly with crudites with Wasabi-Mayo dip and light finger snacks like edamame or classic deviled eggs.

When you move to the table for the main menu, the fruit and subtle sweetness of Chiyomusubi Tokubetsu Junmai (Tottori) or Nanbu Bijin “Southern Beauty” Tokubetsu Junmai (Iwate) , or the full flavored well-balanced acidity of Kagatobi Yamahai (Ishikawa) are all great complements to the salty, smokey, and sweet flavors of traditional brown sugar and mustard glazed ham.

Recommended sake-friendly side dishes such as arugula salad with lemon vinaigrette, steamed asparagus with chopped hard boiled egg drizzled with olive oil, sauteed artichoke hearts, and/or cucumber sushi rolls won’t be in supporting roles when paired with the citrusy notes Tsukinokatsura “Yanagi” Junmai Ginjo (Kyoto) or silky, smooth Shimeharitsuru “Jun” Jumai Ginjo (Niigata).

Kanpai!

Wasabi-Mayo Dip

1/2 cup Kewpie Mayonnaise
1 tablespoon wasabi paste
2 teaspoon fresh lemon juice

Mix all the ingredients together. Serve with crudites.