Learn Delicious Japanese
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit learndeliciousjapanese.substack.com [https://learndeliciousjapanese.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_7] #36 Learn Japanese Drama | Izakaya Recipe: Nikujaga (Week 4) Level 3 May Week 4 — the finale, and the close of all of Level 3. Rain is falling hard over Osaka. Over three weeks Nami gathered her ingredients, learned her cuts, and practiced the slow art of simmering. This week it all comes together in one continuous drama — and in a pot of sweet, salty, faintly-too-sweet にくじゃが, she goes looking for おふくろのあじ, the taste of home. It starts with a craving and a memory. 「にくじゃが!おかあさんのあじやなあ...」— "Nikujaga! That's mom's cooking..." But the dish she's really chasing is her father's. 「おとんのにくじゃがみたいにおいしくできるかなあ...」— "Can I make it as good as Dad's?" Namihei murmurs something he shouldn't know: 「...そうやったなぁ、じまんのにくじゃが...」— "...That's right... his pride and joy." Nami catches it — 「またしってるみたいないいかた...」("again, you talk as if you know") — and he deflects, badly. 「あ、あかん!」 Something is unresolved. Something always is. Then the cooking. Vegetables fall under the knife — とんとんとん — into らんぎり and くしぎり. Beef hits the pan — ジュワッ. Onions turn clear — すきとおる — and release their sweetness. Sugar, soy, mirin, and sake go in, in that exact order, and the あまからい flavor takes shape. A drop lid — おとしぶた — settles on top, and the pot begins its quiet song: ことこと、ことこと, for twenty slow minutes. In that waiting, the drama breathes. 「このまちじかんがまた、いとおしいもんやで...」— "This waiting time is precious too." Nami, half to herself: 「いつかだれかにつくってあげたいなあ...」— "Someday I want to make this for someone." Namihei: 「きっとつくれるで...そのきもちがいちばんのちょうみりょうや...」— "You will. That feeling is the best seasoning of all." The verdict is honest. The potatoes are ほくほく — fluffy — but 「ちょっとあますぎるかなあ?」("maybe a little too sweet?"). Namihei's ruling: 「それもまたあいきょうや!はじめてにしてはじょうできやで!85てん!」— "That's part of its charm! Excellent for a first try! 85 points!" Then sommelier mode. He pours Hiroshima's かもつる ほんじょうぞう — 「えんぎのええなまえや!」("a lucky name!") — a bold sake that won't lose to nikujaga's richness: 「にくじゃがのコクにまけん、おとこらしいさけ。」 Learn ちからづよい (robust) and you learn how a region's sake can carry a region's character. The rain grows louder, and the episode turns tender. 「ひとりやとちょっとさびしいなあ...」— "Being alone is a little lonely." Namihei, gently: 「なみのつくるりょうりをたべに、きっとだれかがきてくれるで。」— "Someone will surely come to eat the food you make." And Nami, softly, closes Level 3: 「かんさいべんって、ほんまにかぞくみたいなあたたかさがあるなあ。ひとりでもさびしくないかんじがするわ。」— "Kansai dialect really has a warmth like family. Even alone, it doesn't feel lonely." Learn the full simmering sequence in Kansai dialect — from cutting to ことこと to かんせい. Learn the heat words つよび・ちゅうび・よわび and why the order of seasonings matters. Learn how 「〜やったら」works as the Kansai "if / in that case," how 「〜とる」replaces 〜ている (できとる = it's ready), and how 「ええ」carries the everyday warmth of standard いい. And learn why にくじゃが — made of little more than potatoes and love — became the dish that means home to so many Japanese people. The premium study guide includes the complete full drama transcript with romaji and English, all cooking onomatopoeia organized by moment (cut, sizzle, sprinkle, simmer), the complete Kansai dialect glossary with standard Japanese comparison, five key grammar patterns (〜で, 〜やったら, ええ, 〜とる, 〜をとおして), cultural deep dives into おふくろのあじ, the Meiji-era history of nikujaga, and かんさい vs かんとう styles, five sweet-salty simmered variations — pork nikujaga, niku-dofu, simmered kabocha, chikuzen-ni, and nikujaga croquettes — plus a Level 3 completion self-assessment and reflection questions on home, patience, and the love that lives in food. 📚 Check Out the Full Study Guide on Substack https://learndeliciousjapanese.substack.com/ [https://learndeliciousjapanese.substack.com/]
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