TIA!
Ken
Eh? Carrots? I've been to Japan twice now, but I don't recall seeing
anything like this.
Any chance of a link to a pic on the web?
--
Dave Fossett
Saitama, Japan
Perhaps Ken's thinking of 赤カブ???
http://allabout.co.jp/gourmet/cookingabc/closeup/CU20031117a/
--
"Originality usually amounts only to plagiarising something unfamiliar"
- Katharine Fullerton Gerould
> Dave Fossett wrote:
> > Ken Yasumoto-Nicolson wrote:
> >
> >>What's the name for them again? Also does anyone know of a web site
> >>describing in English what they're supposed to symbolise? Google
> >>doesn't turn up anything useful.
> >
> > Eh? Carrots? I've been to Japan twice now, but I don't recall seeing
> > anything like this.
> > Any chance of a link to a pic on the web?
>
> Perhaps Ken's thinking of 赤カブ???
> http://allabout.co.jp/gourmet/cookingabc/closeup/CU20031117a/
Nope--I assume he means Kyou-ninjin:
<http://www.santacross.com/shun-116.html>
<http://www.rakuten.co.jp/kawamasa/414100/425769/>
But I wasn't aware of any particular special significance of them at New
Year (except that maybe they make a nice red-and-white contrast with
daikon?). Can't find anything relevant in English, neither....
________________________________________________________________________
Louise Bremner (log at gol dot com)
If you want a reply by e-mail, don't write to my Yahoo address!
Perhaps. Those photos look familiar Ken? I thought about the 金時にんじ
ん thingees too from googling, but the akakabu thingees seemed more
kansai-ish.
>Dave Fossett wrote:
>> Ken Yasumoto-Nicolson wrote:
>>
>>>What's the name for them again? Also does anyone know of a web site
>>>describing in English what they're supposed to symbolise? Google
>>>doesn't turn up anything useful.
>>
>> Eh? Carrots? I've been to Japan twice now, but I don't recall seeing
>> anything like this.
>> Any chance of a link to a pic on the web?
>
>Perhaps Ken's thinking of 赤カブ???
>http://allabout.co.jp/gourmet/cookingabc/closeup/CU20031117a/
I asked the wife, and it was Kintoki Carrots I was thinking of:
http://www.pref.kagawa.jp/eizo/vol003/en/toku3/konsai/01.htm
They seem to be a Kansai thing, used instead of Sweet Potato in Kanto,
so says the BYJW. I still haven't found what they symbolise, however.
Ken
> I asked the wife, and it was Kintoki Carrots I was thinking of:
> http://www.pref.kagawa.jp/eizo/vol003/en/toku3/konsai/01.htm
Naruhodo.