
I recently had the pleasure of attending Mitsuwa’s annual Japanese Summer Festival in Arlington Heights on Saturday. For the past couple years, I’ve been told by my anime friends to visit Mitsuwa. So I finally got the chance to go earlier this summer and I love it. The Japanese bookstore, grocery, and other shops are great, but what I love most of all is the Japanese food court. I’ve never seen so much Japanese food in one place! It’s my mission to try every thing there. I’ve been there almost every week since. For the summer festival, I decided to try out the “outdoor” vendors, most of which isn’t sold in the food court. In addition I saw some awesome Japanese drumming by JASC Tsukasa Taiko, and watched a lot of white people embarrass themselves during the Bon Odori dance.

Takoyaki- Although it looks like a meatball, it’s actually a fried dumpling with a surprise octopus inside. Drizzled on top was a teriyaki-type sauce and fish shavings. I wasn’t a fan. The octopus was okay, but totally caught me off guard. Of course, I didn’t ask what was in it before I ordered. The dumpling itself tasted like potato. I probably wouldn’t order it again, but it was really fun watching them prepare it. They had a frying pan with circle holes in it to hold the dumpling. They used chopsticks to turn over the dumplings. And if you’re not careful transferring the dumpling to the pan, boy do those flames shoot up fast!

Hayashi- If it looks like stew, that’s because it is. I originally was going to buy the curry, but they sold out. This dish is pretty tame and was made to appeal to Western appetites. The beef is thinly sliced with a thick demi-glace sauce. The rice was standard white and nothing special, but compliments the beef nicely. Overall, I enjoyed it, but I would like to try something more exotic next time.

Ramune- One dollar Ramunes? That’s how much they sold if for in the coolers outside. Cheap, especially since it sold for $1.39 inside. My sister begged me to get this one, since she misread Sangaria for “sangria.” Turns out that it was just the name of the company who made it. It was the orange flavor and it tasted fine. I haven’t had a Ramune that was exceptionally good, but the fun of it is popping the marble. My sister bought the lychee flavored Calpico. It kind of tasted like sour milk, very sweet.

Matcha Parfait- I went inside to order this. I needed something sweet and this fit the bill. This was sold in the food court by reLeaf. The ice cream had a unique flavor named matcha, which is finely powdered green tea. In addition, the parfait had red bean paste, mochi, a cookie, and green tea flavored jello at the bottom. This isn’t a flavor I expect to see anytime soon at Baskin Robbins, but it definitely filled my sweet tooth. Next time I want to try the sesame ice cream.
Would I go again? Of course! Where else can I see so much culture in the north-west suberbs? More pictures of Mitsuwa and the Bon Odori dance are after the jump. And if you’re interested in attending, there will be another festival in New Jersey on the 8th, San Jose on the 8th, and Torrance on the 15th. Enjoy! Continue reading →
andrew eats food
I am not a chef. I am not a professional food critic. I am a college aged male who gets excited every time Doritos’ puts out a new flavor chip and watches copious amounts of Anthony Bourdain and Andrew Zimmern on the Travel Channel. But most importantly, I am Andrew, and I eat food.
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