Hara hachi bu is a Japanese saying that advises one to eat until "80% full". This mild form of calorie restriction is said to be one of the secrets of the particularly long-lived residents of the Okinawan archipelago in southern Japan. Similarly, there is an Islamic teaching which advises that the best diet is 1/3 food, 1/3 liquid and 1/3 air. Whatever the health benefits, it is also simply pleasurable to eat mindfully, and there's something in particular about Japanese food that just gets you in the zen zone.
Ajitoya ("secret shop") has just opened in Seddon where the old Mareenie deli used to be and I foresee a rosy future for this bright and bubbly little place. They have a great
Facebook page where they share their meals of the day and respond to requests and comments with genuine hospitality and infectious delight.
There's also a colourful, well-ordered, tempting Japanese grocery range with sweet little hints for buying and cooking.
Sushi rolls ($2.80) are unreal, served on gorgeous earthenware. The brown rice avocado rolls on the left were a bit of a revelation - the brown rice was surprisingly soft and faintly nutty, not at all what I would have expected. The nori is springy and tender and the salmon spanking fresh, rolled with just a tingle of homemade wasabi.
Now, the rolls here are smaller than the ones at Highpoint, but you can't argue with the quality and besides, this way you get to try more flavours! Crispy chicken was good and the inari, sushi rice stuffed into sweet beancurd skin pockets, was a kid hit.
Many of the sit-down meals come as a "set" with your choice of "osozai" deli salads from the cabinet. They are just so pretty, like little rockpools filled with colourful sea creatures. We loved these soba noodles, perfectly al dente with a little vegetable, Japanese mayo and teasing sprinkle of chilli. Salmon tataki was delicious, cooling and centring - sashimi-grade salmon seared momentarily before being accented with sesame and soy.
A set comes with your choice of dish (tempura, karaage fried chicken, agedashi tofu and so on), rice, miso and osozai salad. The miso was perfect, little soybean paste swirls billowing up from the bottom of the bowls, concealing tender tofu squares.
This tempura was excellent. Traditionally it is served on paper as here to demonstrate the chef's skill in making it almost totally non-oily. We got super-fresh fish, calamari, long green beans and a delicate wafer of pumpkin. Loved the green dipping salt!
Everything here is very authentic, so it is very possible our so-so verdict on the agedashi tofu was our overseasoned palates craving salt and sugar, rather than a failing of Ajitoya's. The squares of tofu were soft and the seasoning was very mild and subtle. Freshly grated ginger on top lifted the dish.
I was feeling the Ajitoya love so very much, I wanted to carry on the Japanese theme at home. The grocers in Footscray do have Japanese product sections but they only have the standards and you have to watch the use-by dates. At Ajitoya, I found this fantastic specialist flour for okonomiyaki (Japanese pancake), all-natural and seasoned with dried seafood and vegetables. With fruity okonomiyaki BBQ sauce and Kewpie mayo, we had the fixings for a great dinner to match our lovely lunch.
Winner dinner - took less than 30 minutes to make, was easy peasy, packed with vegies, kids loved it and it used up the half-head of co-op supplied cabbage that has been languishing in the crisper, accusingly haunting my dreams.
If you want the recipe, tell me :) Salad was gorgeous with creamy, sweet sesame dressing, also from Ajitoya.
Well, this is yet another day I didn't eat til 80% full, but I sure did enjoy the extra 30%.
Ajitoya (Facebook page)82 Charles Street, SeddonPhone: 9687 1027Hours: See Ajitoya website (link above) - now open for dinner and breakfast by arrangement
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