cheers for 2012!

A few years back, I welcomed the new year in Japan with friends and colleagues. When we raised our glasses for a toast, before anyone could utter cheers and well wishes for the year, Gali enthusiastically and selflessly exclaimed “to Ate Marj’s love life!!!”. With a cheers as enthusiastic as that, even when everyone had their own wishes for the new year as well, everyone raised their glasses for the toast; a toast for my love life for the new year.

Funny. Because whaddyaknow? It was actually the year Atsushi and I started to become an item.

And so for this new year’s toast, after having had raised our prayers for the new year, I raise this imaginary toast to Gali. Gali, this is for you as my way of saying thank you.

Cheers to Gali’s love life!!!! ๐Ÿ™‚

new year tradition

Being a member of a regular Philippine household, I grew up accustomed to the flurry and mad dash during Philippine new years with all its tradition and superstitions. There’s the preparations for offering 13 fruits on the family dining table, the thorough planning of what to serve during Media Noche – no dishes with chicken to avoid a hard life come new year, serving sweet and sticky dessert for great relationships, boiled eggs which equal the number of family members for unity the whole year next year, fish and seafoods and pork for prosperity, faux gold candies for prosperity, hanging of grapes on doors and windowsills for further prosperity und so weiter.

Even when I was away from home and spent the new years in Singapore and in Japan for four consecutive years, me and my friends and colleagues still try to uphold the Filipino tradition, at least by not serving chicken and by coming up with the 13 fruits although in Japan, it can be quite expensive haha.

Last year, hubs and I spent our Christmas with my family whilst we spend our first new year with a private party in Boracay watching the fireworks display in the party crazed island. This is my first time therefore to experience and really immerse with the Japanese tradition of welcoming the new year. The celebrations itself will be featured in a separate post. This here is for the preparations.

The habotan (่‘‰็‰กไธน). Cabbage looking flowers to ring in luck and prosperity.

20111231-200031.jpg

20111231-200112.jpg

20111231-200020.jpg

The kadomatsu (้–€ๆพ)which are placed in front of establishments again for luck and prosperity.

20111231-200558.jpg

Of course we just had to pose beside one ๐Ÿ˜€

20111231-200741.jpg

Mochi or Japanese rice cake (้ค…)!

20111231-201147.jpg

And yes, the mikan/mandarin orange is considered auspicious as well.

20111231-201309.jpg

These dragon charms are just so cute!!!! Though a bit expensive.

20111231-201506.jpg

20111231-201513.jpg

Let’s ring in a great new year everyone! ๐Ÿ™‚

Lugdunum Bouchon Lyonnais

Good food is best shared with good friends. And so for our bounenkai/Christmas lunch party early this December, Maj and I decided we try out this 2011 Michelin one star newbie – Lugdunum Bouchon Lyonnais.

Facade is real pretty.

20111231-003901.jpg

The inside is a bit cramped and we were ushered immediately to our seats after our coats were taken hence we weren’t able to take a photo of the place.

Maj and I decided to go for the 5-course Canuts menu although we each chose a different course.

House-made tarama & toast served with seasonal salad for Maj.

20111231-004644.jpg

Duck foie gras panacotta with green Puy lentils for me. I don’t eat liver and there are times foie gras isn’t that good but Lyonnais did good with this one. This one I think is my favorite for that meal. The bacon was served whole, for aesthetics purposes.

20111231-005201.jpg

It has to be eaten this way.

20111231-005506.jpg

Next up is our soup for the day – Pumpkin soup with blue cheese. My second favorite. So creamy I just love it. The pumpkin soup we had in our wedding by K by Cunanan was REALLY good but the one by Lyonnais is still much better. That’s probably how it is to be a Michelin starred resto.

20111231-010422.jpg

They serve the dishes mostly in a gray clay slab but all their china bear the resto’s name.

20111231-010903.jpg

My main dish is scallops and lobster. The scallops were great. But the whole dish smelled fishy, the kind that can almost make someone with a very sensitive stomach gag. Beyond the smell though, the dish tasted good especially the scallops. But I’d say this is the least of what I liked in our Lyonnais meal.

20111231-011538.jpg

Whipped fresh cheese with chives, garlic & parsley.

20111231-011913.jpg

Dessert time! After having had forgotten to take a photo of Maj’s main course, I made certain I took a photo of her dessert with the Lyonnais logo powdered into her clay slab. Traditionnal pink praline tart & snow egg style

20111231-012225.jpg

Mine was Eskimo Iced pumpkin, hot chocolate and hazelnuts. You’re supposed to dip your ice drop into the hot chocolate. I know I’ve already had the pumpkin soup so having pumpkin again for dessert is kind of redundant. But I sure don’t mind since it was really good. And boy, it was really wholly made of pumpkin.

20111231-012659.jpg

20111231-012708.jpg

Food was really good I think. The only thing though is that you have to consume your five-course meal in less than two hours as they have sort of a time limit for their lunch meals. Yes, even on a weekend.

Still though, the place is worth a try and pretty affordable at that.
Do check the place out! ๐Ÿ™‚

Lugdunum Bouchon Lyonnais
1st Floor, Ebiya Building, 4-3-7 Kagurazaka,
Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 162-0825

in-laws

We’re staying over with Hubs’ family for the new year holidays. The past three days had been really interesting and fun that it’s just but right to have this post for them, which I know is not enough to express how thankful I am to them.

As we go drive around for a road trip, my chest swells with thankfulness. We have received a lot of blessings this 2011. But one of the biggest blessings is that Atsushi’s family warmly welcomed me as a new member of the family that leaves me with a feeling of wanting to be a better daughter-in-law because of all the good things they’ve done to me.

Ojichan, Obachan, Otosan, Okasan, Mayumi, ใ‚ใ‚ŠใŒใจใ†ใ”ใ–ใ„ใพใ—ใŸ. I’ll do my best to make your son even happier.

Will feature later on the places we’ve been to the last couple of days once I’ve downloaded the photos. Here are some teasers for now.

Free milk from Shionoe (ใ—ใŠใฎใˆ), the dairy farm we went to yesterday. Their milk jam is just so delicious!!

20111230-225727.jpg

A stopover at Osaki no Hana (ใŠใ•ใใฎใฏใช) in our road trip earlier for this beautiful view.

20111230-230425.jpg

By the loooong Seto Bridge (ใ›ใจใŠใฏใ—).

20111230-231321.jpg

For most part of this evening, we watched videos of when Atsushi and his sister were still kids, with Atsushi as young as four years old (gee that’s almost 28 years ago!). One thing I learned: like how he is as a grown up, hubs was definitely NOT a boring kid as we had tons of laugh with Atsushi’s antics. As Otosan has said, he sure was a comedian. ๐Ÿ˜€

on albums and baskin robbins

First day into our vacation and a long-awaited exciting package has arrived already.

20111229-003410.jpg

20111229-003420.jpg

Our main album,the black one, must have weighed more than five kilos! Dino and team are just amazing. Someday soon, I’ll try to post some, especially those that looked like paintings.

Had a mall outing with my family-in-law. Dropped by Baskin and Robbins. Love Potion #31 and chocolate mint. Love.

20111229-004211.jpg

Yoi otoshi wo

Today was officially my last working day for the year. Hurray! Thankful for the work in general. And thankful for a very productive day at work. There were a number of design issues that surfaced within the day but thankfully they were resolved within the day as well. Happy as a bee.

Currently writing this on board a bus albeit I was only able to blog this during an interchange stop as I usually get nauseous when using a mobile device or reading on board a running vehicle. We’re now probably halfway towards our destination. Excited. ๐Ÿ™‚

“yoi otoshi wo” by the way is the expression that the Japanese say at the end of the year to greet each other a happy new year. A different expression is used when greeting each other once you’ve crossed the new year, but I’ll blog about that next time. Was giggling as I greeted my office mates earlier with this expression as it was my first time to say it.

Yoi otoshi wo! ๐Ÿ™‚