Current:Home > ScamsPeople in Tokyo wait in line 3 hours for a taste of these Japanese rice balls -PrimeFinance
People in Tokyo wait in line 3 hours for a taste of these Japanese rice balls
View
Date:2025-04-15 00:57:36
TOKYO — The world's great cuisines can regale the eye and the palate. Or, alternatively, they may celebrate the plain and exalt the humble — for example, by recreating home-style comfort food in a restaurant setting.
A popular and compact eatery in Tokyo's Toshima ward, called Onigiri Bongo, does just that. It has served one of Japan's most humble foods, the onigiri, or rice ball, for some 60 years.
Diners at Onigiri Bongo — named for the drum, whose sound resonates far and wide like the restaurant's reputation — are squeezed into nine seats around an L-shaped counter. Its tiny space, and its reputation as one of the city's top onigiri emporia, produces lines of customers stretching down the street, waiting for three or four hours, or more.
Behind the counter is the restaurant's wiry and sprightly owner, 70-year-old Yumiko Ukon. She scoops rice from a huge pot, putting it in triangular molds and packing them with a variety of fillings — more than 50, including standards such as bonito or salmon flake, pickled plum, mustard greens and cod roe, and innovations such as pork and kimchi, and fried chicken with mayonnaise and soy sauce.
Then she puts more rice on the top, and deftly shapes them with three final squeezes. She wraps each rice ball in a thin sheet of seaweed and serves them to customers at the counter. The restaurant serves between 1,200 and 1,500 onigiri every day.
Japanese people have been eating onigiri for 2,000 years
The onigiri is sometimes born of the leftovers of family rice pots, and often packed in school and travel lunchboxes and hiking and picnic bags. Packaged, commercial versions of onigiri line the shelves of convenience stores across Japan.
Archaeological evidence from Japan's Yayoi period (roughly 300 B.C.E. to 250 C.E.) seems to suggest that Japanese have been eating variations of onigiri for more than 2,000 years. The rice balls are known by different names, depending on the era and region. The word onigiri itself comes from the Japanese word "nigiru," to squeeze, referring to how the rice ball is shaped by hand.
Bongo Onigiri's main ingredients are sourced from around the country, including short-grain Koshihikari rice from terraced paddies of Ukon's native Niigata prefecture, seaweed from Japan's Ariake Sea and salt from Okinawa.
For the current owner, the restaurant was "love at first sight"
At Onigiri Bongo, Ukon's gentle squeezes leave the rice balls fluffy and crumbly. The onigiri are sizable, the rice a bit al dente, and the tastes simple, genuine and straight-up scrumptious. The rice balls are often served in a set, including pickles and miso soup. A weekday meal set with two onigiri and tofu soup goes for for 800 yen, about $5.98 — in Tokyo, a very affordable lunch.
But to Ukon, what makes onigiri special is not the details of preparation, but their meaning, and the way people bond over them.
"It's not about the technique. It's about how much feeling you can put into each onigiri. That's why I'll never forget my mother's onigiri for the rest of my life," she says.
"It was part of our culture not to buy them, but to make them at home," she recalls.
After she moved to Tokyo at around age 20, "Onigiri were always there in my happy memories, like of athletic festivals or school hikes," says Ukon. "My best memories of onigiri are of the ones my mother made when I came home from Tokyo."
Freshly arrived in the capital, she says she felt like a "food refugee" because "I couldn't find food I liked," she recalls. "But a friend introduced me to a delicious rice ball restaurant, and it was love at first sight."
Ukon was not destined to be just another customer. She married the restaurant's owner, Tasuku Ukon, 27 years her senior. After he passed away in 2012, she took over.
Now, after more than 40 years of running the place, she continues to serve up onigiri with vigor and passion.
"I thought about retiring at 70," she says, "but I'm still in good health, and I want to see the smiling faces of the people eating the rice balls."
Chie Kobayashi contributed to this report in Tokyo.
veryGood! (89844)
Related
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- An Indiana county hires yet another election supervisor, hoping she’ll stay
- Medical incident likely led to SUV crashing into Walmart store, authorities say
- Iris Apfel, fashion icon who garnered social media fame in her later years, dies at 102
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Haiti capital Port-au-Prince gripped by chaos as armed gangs kill police, vow to oust prime minister
- Former NFL player Braylon Edwards saves 80-year-old man from gym locker room attack
- SpaceX calls off crew launch to space station due to high winds along flight path
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Suspected drunk driver charged with killing bride on wedding night released on bail
Ranking
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Knicks avoid catastrophic injury as Jalen Brunson diagnosed with knee contusion
- 'The Black Dog': Taylor Swift announces fourth and final version of 'Tortured Poets'
- An Indiana county hires yet another election supervisor, hoping she’ll stay
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- 'SNL' host Sydney Sweeney addresses Glen Powell rumors, 'Trump-themed party' backlash
- Alaska’s Iditarod dogs get neon visibility harnesses after 5 were fatally hit while training
- More mountain snow expected even as powerful blizzard moves out of Northern California
Recommendation
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
Head Start preschools aim to fight poverty, but their teachers struggle to make ends meet
SpaceX calls off crew launch to space station due to high winds along flight path
How Apache Stronghold’s fight to protect Oak Flat in central Arizona has played out over the years
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
How a student's friendship with Auburn coach Bruce Pearl gave him the strength to beat leukemia
MLS pulls referee from game after photos surface wearing Inter Miami shirt
Medical incident likely led to SUV crashing into Walmart store, authorities say