japanese culture

where do i start with anime? movies? series? i've seen grave of fire flies and akira, but nothing special. boost me up.

  • Watch anime and then form opinions if you like it or not. Then look up director and the studio. Google those two things. Pick new movies and TV shows.

    32°
  • op here. i like that animation style, but a lot of these things- like dragonball, are like 5 minutes of story development and 25 minutes of absolutely nothing happening at all. i don't want to be whacked off like that. I want action. Tell me a story. Show me something amazing.

    Can you suggest somewhere to start?

    34°
  • >Can you suggest somewhere to start?

    Watch movies. These are usually short and sharp. As you are new to the scene, try not to pigeon-hole yourself yet.

    Anyhow there's:
    Nausicaä by studio Ghibli
    Paprika by director Satoshi Kon
    Summer Wars by director Mamoru Hosoda
    Totoro by studio Ghibli

    Alternativelyt google " standalone anime movie " and check those out.

    36°
  • Thanks anon

    37°
  • I recommend watching Psycho-Pass, Steins;Gate, Mirai Nikki, and Koi Kaze.

    38°
  • read dog nigga

    39°
  • Play jap games & draw jap art
    https://youtu.be/y9NU10a-pgI
    https://twitter.com/TrinketEric/status/1145183942028533761#m

    41°
  • I always prefer eating out locally; it creates a comforting illusion of village living and it makes getting home so much more affordable after a few glasses of wine - or sake, as the case may be. So crossing the bridge for a meal is not taken lightly. But, encouraged by friends' rave reviews of this long-standing Mosman restaurant, we take the plunge and head north.

    The door opens to an unpretentious room; it is a warm, comfortable space, with soft-yellow walls and perfect lighting, accentuated by flickering tea lights. There are wooden tables and chairs - with padded seats - and a hanging wooden grid on the ceiling.

    We are here for the house speciality, the six-course set menu or kaiseki, a food experience that embodies Japanese culture and is traditionally served at tea ceremonies. In essence a tasting menu, each course is made up of several small dishes that balance flavour, texture and appearance.

    One of the joys of kaiseki is it speeds up ordering when dining with a group. There are two kaiseki menus: mino (regular) or goshu (seasonal), with a choice of mains and dessert flavours. Many of the kaiseki dishes are available a la carte in larger servings.

    The restaurant is full at 7pm but our friendly waitress seats us quickly, takes orders and delivers the sake, along with a basket of sake cups for us to make a selection.

    Then the parade of lacquered trays begins. The opening salvo is an aperitif or amuse - a shot glass of plum wine, surprisingly delicious, and not at all cloyingly sweet, offset by a mouthful of tart pickled mackerel.

    An appetiser follows on a green-glazed plate with a bonsai serving of octopus and cuttlefish salad sitting in a puddle of sweet miso. Just enough to whet the appetite, it gives a false sense of what lies ahead.

    The waitress delivers a third tray, a knockout presentation of three pieces of plump sashimi - tuna, salmon and kingfish -

    52°
  • >>52
    plus two pieces of sushi with a stripe of addictive Japanese mayo and a fresh Pacific oyster raised on a pedestal and bathed in a bright vinaigrette. All four diners agree the kingfish sashimi is a knockout.

    When tray No.4 arrives, I start to worry. There are five entrees in individual pottery bowls and plates, all presented like edible art. Included is a strip of grilled ocean perch with a dash of citrusy ponzu sauce, a zucchini flower stuffed with minced prawn and lotus root, and a piece of crunchy deep-fried soft-shell crab beside a tiny mound of green-tea salt.

    As the tray is cleared away, I notice the growing pile of small dishes waiting to be hand washed at the far end of the room. Exquisite ceramic plates are not dishwasher friendly.

    My main is a piece of Atlantic salmon, grilled to succulent pinkness, with a sweet walnut teriyaki sauce and salad. Others choose the light-as-feather assorted tempura and a spicy miso hotpot of mixed seafoods.

    No one thinks there could possibly be room for dessert. Of course, we are wrong. Tray No.6 bears a small dish of ice-cream or sorbet chosen from a range of knockout flavours (blood orange is the table favourite), alongside slices of kiwi fruit and rockmelon. There is also a pot of green-tea panna cotta - comforting and addictive - and a square of soft, dark chocolate dusted with a nutty soybean powder.

    Definitely worth crossing the bridge for.

    Menu Japanese, specialising in kaiseki, but also a la carte.

    Value Very good. Entrees, $14; mains, $24; dessert, $8, six-course kaiseki, $59.

    Recommended dishes Kingfish sashimi, grilled salmon with walnut dressing; blood-orange sorbet.

    53°

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