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Last week, I was browsing for a link online to the scary Japanese egg-moulds that some people think are an essential ingredient of bento boxes. As a side-effect, I found the rather wonderful website, Just Bento which is run by a Japanese lady living in Switzerland, and provides masses of information about making bento boxes.

Bento, as the website helpfully explains, is just a Japanese word for any meal served in a box. In British Japanese restaurants, a bento box is a full meal served in a lacquered, multi-section box, which is how I usually understand the term. However, it seems that the rather simpler approach is the sort of boxed lunch that I'm led to believe is the standard Japanese packed lunch.

Anyway, I pottered around the Just Bento website, and got quite excited and decided that I quite fancied making myself bento boxes for lunch. The major disadvantage of this, as Just Bento Lady points out, is that you have to get out of bed a bit earlier to actually assemble the thing. I am not good at getting out of bed.

Reading the website, I very nearly succumbed to a creeping evil I call new-hobby disorder. Ooh, I thought, I could make a trip to the nice Japanese shop in West Acton and buy various ingredients, and I could order a pretty bento box online that'll be the right shape to fit in my bag...

Oy, I said. Stop it, I said. See if you can manage the getting up of the morning and actually doing it part first, then start purchasing the glamorous accessories. Accordingly, my bento boxes this week will be presented in those cheap, white plastic containers that take-away meals arrive in.

So, yesterday morning I bounced out of bed (aided by being actually quite excited at the prospect of assembling my exciting new lunch). On Saturday I'd bought a piece of salmon and made some salted salmon, and I made up a batch of pepper and onion confit. I'd also cooked a batch of rice and frozen it in portions as recommended by Bento Lady. Yesterday morning, I nuked the frozen rice and squashed it into one end of a box. I cooked a piece of the salmon, dolloped out a portion of vegetable confit and made a little Japanese omelette (tamagoyaki). The omelette had been a bit daunting, as I don't have a proper tamagoyaki pan (or indeed a small normal frying pan), but at the last minute I found a cheaty one-egg one-person-sized tamagoyaki method that used a normal frying pan.

I shoehorned everything into the box, realised there was an odd-shaped space left, so steamed some broccoli florets to fill the gap (where by steamed I do mean nuked in a mug in the microwave :)

I was quite proud of the resulting box:

My first homemade bento box

It survived the trip to work without suffering mishap, damage or becoming disarrayed. It was pretty good, though it was a first attempt and I feel it could be improved. I'd massively over-salted the salmon, for example, and found it a bit too much.

The rice was also a little hard and dry. Which is what I expect from frozen rice, but I'd been won over by Bento Lady's assurances that if you wrap it up in cling film while still warm, cool it, then freeze it it'll be ok. It was indeed "ok", but no better; I'll try again with a shorter-grain rice as I believe they freeze better (if you can't tell from the pic, that's brown rice).

The omelette was bloody marvellous, though :)

Yesterday morning, it did take me quite some time to put my box together: around 35 minutes. However most of that was unfamiliarity: can I just put this cling-film wrapped portion of rice straight in the microwave? Will it explode if I don't puncture the cling film? (The answers, by the way, are yes and no, respectively). I had to keep consulting recipes and instructions, and I also faffed around chopping up, wrapping and freezing the rest of the salted salmon. I am optimistic that this time can be improved on.

I'm not put off the idea yet. Watch this space for further boxes and the debate of various philosophical lunch-related points...

Date: 2011-09-20 10:45 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ghoti.livejournal.com
I cook by eyeballing it. I think I may once have packed marge into a cup to see how much it looked like, but mostly I just guess, and pick my audience as to whether I translate into appproximate weights or volumes.

In that case, I think I got it from a source that used cups but adapted it quite a bit.
Edited Date: 2011-09-20 10:46 am (UTC)

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