octopus

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finally finished today.

i wasn’t sure what was going on exactly with this drawing while i was drawing it. i just added whatever images came to mind. even after i finished, i still don’t really know what’s going on. that’s the way i usually work. most of my drawings have just a couple of figures on a blank background. this time, i continued adding things on one sheet of paper and placed them in a landscape. i wish i had a bigger paper. i could have kept going.

a couple of weeks ago, i invited a local artist, dave geary to my apartment for coffee. we’ll be doing a show together next spring at a gallery in saskatoon. so we get together sometimes to talk about what we would like to do. i’m so glad and lucky to be able to do a show with him.

dave told me about a game called “exquisite corpse“. we played the game over coffee. it was fun. you never know what the result will be.

that game must have been at the back of my mind when i did this drawing. i was playing the game by myself. i didn’t fold the drawing paper. but i imagined my mind being folded. every time i opened the skin of my mind, random images showed up. i just placed the images on paper.

my mind is quite random. my mind is everywhere, so i don’t make much sense when i talk. but for some reason, it all makes sense on paper.

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it’s growing + growing out of nowhere…

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basically it’s expanding.

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and stones.

it’s 1:30am now. drawing on my kitchen table. it’s not finished yet.

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if you were born in the kansai area of japan, chances are you have a takoyaki pan at home. when i was little, my grandma or my mom used to make me and brother takoyaki for lunch on saturdays, after morning school.

takoyaki are dumplings made with batter, octopus, pickled ginger, tenkasu, and green onion. they’re usually topped with a barbecue sauce, shaved dry bonito flakes, mayonnaise and ao-nori (green seaweed flakes). we eat them with toothpicks. people in tokyo use chopsticks. that’s a no-no.

takoyaki was invented in the Taisho Era (1912-1926). there’re many takoyaki vendors throughout japan. takoyaki stands can be found at any japanese festival, always ready to serve. each region has its own unique variation on takoyaki, whether it’s sauce, ingredients or the way of cooking. for example, in osaka takoyaki is topped with a thick sauce, almost like a bbq sauce made with worcheshireshrehshioeaohfds sauce, ketchup and sugar. in akashi (hyogo prefecture), they’re served with soup. apparently, some people in kansai eat takoyaki with rice. i think that’s disgusting. i never eat takoyaki like that. carb plus carb? i don’t think so. it’s as bad as yakisoba pan(noodle sandwich).

during the 1990s, takoyaki shops from kyoto and osaka expanded to shibuya, the most fashionable area of tokyo. of course, kansai (kyoto and osaka) is culturally superior to tokyo, so this created a “takoyaki boom” in tokyo. when something “booms” in tokyo, it soon spreads everywhere in japan. soon, the takoyaki idea expanded too, and there were all sorts of takoyaki and octopus themed products.

there were songs about takoyaki, takoyaki-shaped tissue boxes, takoyaki towels, takoyaki mirrors, books about takoyaki, takoyaki key holders (and another version), takoyaki-flavored snacks, takoyaki stationery, tako-shaped cakes, takoyaki lollipops, and takoyaki necklaces. these items have been collected by a takoyaki specialist — kumagai mana from kyoto (she claims to be the only takoyaki-ist in the universe). takoyaki all over the place!

now you know why i needed to get away from japan.

i wasn’t that crazy about takoyaki. but when i came to canada, i made a clear point not to forget to bring a takoyaki pan with me.

my recipe might offend some serious takoyaki lovers from osaka, because i didn’t use octopus. octopus (”tako”) is really pretty important in takoyaki (”grilled octopus balls”). paul is “allergic” to seafood, so i used tofu, corn, cheese and turkey coldcuts instead. i didn’t have pickled ginger or tenkasu. i didn’t even have mayonnaise (i love japanese mayonnaise but i don’t like to keep it at home because i use it like crazy — not so good for my figure).

the only normal ingredients i used were flour, green onion, and ao-nori. everything else i faked. so this isn’t takoyaki, but “nanchatte takoyaki” (pseudo-takoyaki).

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recipe

batter:

  • flour 75g (1/3c)
  • skim milk powder TB1
  • baking powder tsp 1
  • sugar tsp 1
  • salt tsp 1/4
  • soy sauce tsp 1
  • soup stock 300cc
  • egg 1

sauce (make up your own proportions):

  • worchestershire sauce
  • ketchup
  • sugar

ingredients:

  • octopus cubes
  • green onion
  • pickled ginger
  • dried baby shrimp
  • or anything you want (i used corn, cheese, tofu, and turkey)

(for best results, let your batter “rest” overnight)

  1. pour the batter in your hot takoyaki pan
  2. sprinkle your ingredients, making sure you get at least one of each in each takoyaki
  3. once the bottom is cooked, use a long wooden skewer to score the edge (run it around the rim of each circle) and flip it over. the uncooked batter will run down to the bottom and form the 2nd half of the ball.
  4. remove the cooked takoyaki
  5. brush with sauce. add mayonnaise. sprinkle ao-nori.
  6. serve with two toothpicks (important!)
  7. enjoy!!

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