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Review: Trader Joe’s Japanese Style Fried Rice

20 Monday Apr 2015

Posted by whatahipster in Reviews

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animal free, arsenic, cruelty free, dairy free, edamame, fried rice, frozen meals, hijiki seaweed, japan, japanese, quick meals, review, seaweed, tofu, trader joe's, vegan, vegan review, veganism, vegetarian, vegetarianism

So…

It has been a few (four) months since my last post. Oooooops! My blog should be taken away from me due to neglect. I plan on getting back in the swing of things as soon as possible, but until then, enjoy this product review of one of my favorite quick meals.

Trader Joe’s is abundantly vegan friendly, if you know where to look. They are in the process of marking all of their explicitly vegan products with a large V, but if you look carefully, there are quite a few products that are inherently vegan and unmarked.

From the tiny island called the “Land of the Rising Sun,” this frozen frenzy of flavors is an expedient way to get a whole lot of nourishment.

Trader Joe's Japanese Style Fried Rice with Edamame, Tofu, and Hijiki Seaweed

 

Seriously, this product tastes like you are in a petite Japanese market with the briny breeze of the ocean wafting through the wooden slats. As you peruse the fresh seafood, you catch glimpses of fishermen dumping their plump nets into a rusty bucket. Fish flapping about, seagulls sailing overhead, waves washing up.

I have never been to Japan, but I have had numerous traditional Japanese meals, courtesy of my local Japanese club (don’t judge). The flourishing flavors of this dish are very impressive. One look at the ingredients and I could tell it was almost authentic. If you are looking for flavors from around the world, definitely check this dish out!

Ease of preparation is surprising.

Step 1: Heat some oil in a pan

Step 2: Stir fry the dish until warmed through

DONEZO!

Nutritionally, this meal is sufficient; the only drawback is the amount of sodium, so just offset that by drinking a lot of water with your meal.

My favorite part of this dish is the tofu; the texture and qualities of the stringy tofu are reminiscent of the egg that is traditionally in stir fry. I ate SO MUCH Chinese Take Out growing up that I am exceedingly familiar with this type of fried rice. I can’t help but to love this taste and texture. You know, that off-yellow scrambled mess that you see in your rice? IT IS DELICIOUS.

Oh, and the product actually resembles what is pictured on the front of the bag! It does say the typical “Serving Suggestion” and “Enlarged to show texture” but it is abundantly plentiful with the distribution of the edamame and carrots. Good on ya, Trader Joe’s.

The only drawbacks are: 1. It tends to get oily quickly, but if you do not use enough oil it definitely sticks to the pan. 2. The rice isn’t brown rice (I am a bourgeois, white, smoothie drinker, I know). 3. I do not have five more bags in my freezer right now.

 

IMG_2326

 

 

Trader Joe's Japanese Style Fried Rice with Edamame, Tofu, and Hijiki Seaweed

The Verdict:

Taste: 9/10

Texture: 8/10

Preparation: 9/10

Value: 8/10

Nutrition: 7/10

Quality: 9/10

Score: 85%    B

 

Did you know?

Hijiki seaweed is a brown-colored seaweed grown on the rocky coasts of Japan, China, and Korea. It is harvested at low tide and used in common Japanese cuisine. It has potential health benefits due to the high levels of dietary fiber, calcium, magnesium, and iron. Japanese folklore lends to the belief that daily consumption of this long, stringy, brown seaweed aids health and beauty; supposedly, the key to long, lustrous, black hair is eating hijiki.

Some health concerns have arisen regarding some inorganic arsenic appearing in hijiki. Health agencies have proposed removing hijiki consumption from a daily diet. The Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan has responded by acknowledging the fact that ingesting 4.7 g of hijiki is potentially dangerous, but the average daily consumption of Japanese citizens is only 0.9 g. Normal servings of hijiki would never reach the high level required for possible arsenic poisoning.

So yes, ingesting hijiki does place inorganic arsenic into your body. HOWEVER, arsenic levels also appear in fish, rice, and wine. So I am totally ingesting away! (I want long, lustrous, black hair!)

Terrifying Taiji Traditions pt 1

19 Thursday Jun 2014

Posted by whatahipster in Uncategorized

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Tags

animal cruelty, animal rights, dolphin hunting, japan, taiji, taiji cove, vegan, veganism, whaling

Even if you do not follow animal activists and vegan news blogs, you may have heard some scandal over the dolphin hunting in Taiji, Japan. News coverage has leaked to some major networks and the outrage is spreading.

A little back story:

Taiji fisherman have been hunting, fishing, and whaling since the early 12th century. Since the early 17th century, there has been a commercial industry for it. Being so heavily surrounded by the Pacific Ocean, it is no wonder that Japanese traditions have been oriented around the ocean. Traditionally, hunting begins in September and lasts until April. Men would go out to spot a pod of dolphins and when spotted, they would slice the neck of all the dolphins, causing exsanguination, or blood loss, to end their lives. This method was eventually banned so the hunters moved to a different method. They would lower one end of a steel pipe into the water. Using a hammer or mallet, the fishermen would clash and clang the pipe in order to make loud, irritating sounds spread in the water; this alarms and agitates the dolphins. Swimming away from the noises, the men strategically cause a ruckus to drive the dolphins closer to the coastline. At the coastline, other fishermen are waiting with nets to capture the pod. As soon as the dolphins are close enough, they are ensnared and tangled in a net and left overnight to calm down. This is their last night alive. In the morning, the men would pull the dolphins out one by one to slaughtered by shoving a metal pin through the neck and brain stem of the dolphins, dying within seconds. Numerous papers and reports have confessed that this method of slaughter would never be tolerated in the western world, even in the most cruel slaughterhouses. In 1878, a group of fisherman was trying to slaughter a large whale. The whale was very powerful and resisted, pulling many fisherman out of the water; about one hundred men were killed in this incident. Any loss of life is just that, a loss. I wish that humans would not die from animals just as much as I wish that animals would stop dying at the hands of humans.  

Dolphins are sentient, emotional creatures

In Taiji, there is a whale museum which collects different artifacts exhibiting ancient whaling techniques as well skeletal displays of numerous whale species. They have a live tank which is small in size that holds many whales and dolphins. One particular dolphin “living” in the tank is named Angel. She is albino. She was taken from her pod. Her family was slaughtered. She is forced to swim back and forth because the tank is not wide enough for a single dolphin to enjoy a good swim, let alone many dolphins to live together peacefully. Anonymous footage has shown that the other dolphins bully her and push her around. Dolphins are emotional. If a dolphin mother has lost a child, reports have shown that she will nudge her child to the surface to try to revive the passed creature. Angel has been seen to be an outcast and thus reclusive. 

This is only the beginning. I am going to watch the film “The Cove” to learn more about this practice and I will create another post following up.

Yes, that is blood.


Resources:

  • http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10888705.2013.768925
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiji_dolphin_drive_hunt
  • http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/02/140202-dolphins-taiji-japan-whales-marine-animal-altruism-science/?rptregcta=reg_free_np&rptregcampaign=20131016_rw_membership_n1p_us_se_c1#
  • http://savejapandolphins.org/blog/post/we-remember-angel
  • https://www.thedodo.com/undercover-footage-captures-wh-458743097.html

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