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Made Better in Japan
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204542404577157290201608630.html?mod=googlenews_wsjFor decades, Japan simply imported the wares of foreign cultures, but recession has led to invention. The country has begun creating the finest American denim, French cuisine and Italian espresso in the world. Now is the time to visit.
It used be that the Japanese offered idiosyncratic takes on foreign things. White bread was transformed into shokupan, a Platonic ideal of fluffiness, aerated and feather-light in a way that made Wonder Bread seem dense. Pasta was almost always spaghetti, perfectly cooked al dente, but typically doused with cream sauce and often served with spicy codfish roe. Foreign imports here took on a life of their own, becoming something completely different and utterly Japanese.
But now 20-plus years of recession have killed that dream. Louis Vuitton sales are plummeting, and magnums of Dom Pérignon are no longer being uncorked at a furious pace. That doesn't mean the Japanese have turned away from the world. They've just started approaching it on their own terms, venturing abroad and returning home with increasingly more international tastes and much higher standards, realizing that the apex of bread making may not be Wonder Breadstyle loaves, but pain à l'ancienne.
Japanese chefs are now cooking almost every cuisine imaginable, combining fidelity to the original with locally sourced products that complement or replace imports. When they prepare foreign foods, they're no longer asking themselves how they can make a dish more Japaneseor even more Italian, French or American. Instead they've moved on to a more profound and difficult challenge: how to make the whole dining experience better.
As a result of this quest, Japan has become the most culturally cosmopolitan country on Earth, a place where you can lunch at a bistro that serves 22 types of delicious and thoroughly Gallic terrines, shop for Ivy Leaguestyle menswear at a store that puts to shame the old-school shops of Cambridge, Massachusetts, and spend the evening sipping rare single malts in a serene space that boasts a collection of 12,000 jazz, blues and soul albums. The best of everything can be found here, and is now often made here: American-style fashion, haute French cuisine, classic cocktails, modern luxury hotels. It might seem perverse for a traveler to Tokyo to skip sukiyaki in favor of Neapolitan pizza, but just wait until he tastes that crust.
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Made Better in Japan (Original Post)
Bonobo
Jan 2012
OP
unionworks
(3,574 posts)1. The Japanese
...have always adopted and refined the best of things
Lucky Luciano
(11,264 posts)2. Japan is the best.
More Michelin stars there than any other country - including France.
The quality of all foods, goods, and services are impeccable and the people ultracivilized.
It is good having a Japanese wife who shows me the inside track there!
Bonobo
(29,257 posts)3. Yes to everything you said.
Kansai is catching up with Tokyo area too wrt Michelin restaurants.
And "Amen" about Japanese wives. More common sense and maturity than I deserve...