Know what would taste really ono right about now?
A big bowl of warm, steamy, soul satisfying saimin!
At this very moment, I'm dreaming of dipping my chopsticks in hot dashi and slurping up some fresh saimin noodles -- just the right firmness, a little curly -- with a bit of char-siu (sweet roast pork), kamaboko (fish cake), fried egg and crunchy wonbok cabbage. See those chopped green onions nestled atop the noodles? I'm gonna scoop them up and slurp again. Mmmmm!
James Rubio/flickr
Saimin is truly "Hawai'i in a bowl," a ubiquitous snack turned main dish inspired by Japanese ramen, Chinese mein, and Filipino pancit. It always, always hits the spot. Now there's a brand new award winning picture book called Plenty Saimin by Feng Feng Hutchins and Adriano Abatayo (Island Paradise Publishing, 2010), a tasty tale sure to satisfy the appetites of diehard saimin lovers and curious foodies.
For his birthday, Ah Kee's mom is making his favorite long-life noodles. On the way to the market, Ah Kee can't quell his excitement nor stem his enthusiastic generosity as he invites friend after friend to share their meal. Ma worries they won't have enough to feed everyone, but Ah Kee can't help but invite whomever they run into. She needn't have worried, since each friend arrives with an ingredient to add to the dish.
This deceptively simple stone-soup-like narrative, set in a 1950's rural plantation village, echoes saimin's unique evolution -- a noodle dish containing Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Filipino, Portuguese and Hawaiian elements, informally and spontaneously created by sugarcane and pineapple plantation workers of the early 1900's. Plenty Saimin captures the essence of Island eating, a lively communal event where ethnicities blend, friendships are fostered, and each bite is flavored with captivating talk story.
Earlier this month, Plenty Saimin won a 2011 Ka Palapala Po'okela Award for Excellence in Children's Literature as well as an Honorable Mention citation for Excellence in Children's Illustrative/Photographic Books. It was also nominated for the Ezra Jack Keats Award and the Asian Pacific American Award for Literature. We're thrilled for debut picture book author Feng Feng Hutchins and artist Adriano Abatayo, whose detailed, muted color pencil illustrations gracefully evoke times past when life was simpler, the pace was slower, and people were more attuned to nurturing one another.
Feng and Adriano with publisher Kerry Germain at Native Books launch, Honolulu, HI.
As you can imagine, it was probably quite a thrill to have one's first published children's book garner such glowing accolade
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Blog: jama rattigan's alphabet soup (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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By: Jama Rattigan,
on 5/18/2011
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