supernutjapan: (Default)
[personal profile] supernutjapan
I'm writing this while I wait for the Friday Five to be posted. If they don't post today, I guess I will snag an older one from archives.

So this is from March 26, 2021 -

1) What spring holiday(s) do you celebrate?
On February 2, we have Setsubun, a "holiday" (not a national rest day, just a special day) to cleanse the home of bad luck/demons and bring good luck in by throwing dried beans. The designated food for this holiday is the long, uncut sushi roll - which you are supposed to eat without cutting... not like in this picture. We used to celebrate this day when the kids were smaller but now, not so much.
Setsubun
(Picture left to right of thick sushi roll (looks like raw salmon and tuna and egg rolls inside), a two horned demon mask worn by a grown-up to be the brunt of bean throwers or the perpetrator of screaming children, and little dried soy beans in a traditional box type snack bowl.)

On March 3, we have Girl's Day, celebrated by decorating the house with some special dolls, eating mixed sushi and Sakura-mochi. I bought some sakuramochi and made sushi for dinner this year for my daughter. Unfortunately, we don't have a doll set. I really want one though.
sakuramochi
(Picture of a four step array of the imperial household dolls, starting at the top with the prince and princes, three women attendants in the middle with two sets of round celebratory rice cakes between them, five men musicians below them with drum and lute, and at the bottom two guards with bow and arrows on each side and two sets of bowls for celebratory food for the prince and princes, and some more colorful diamond shaped rice cakes in the middle. And, a picture of Sakuramochi. There are two kinds, traditionally of Western and Eastern Japan, left to right respectively. The Western Japan type is pink sticky rice with bean paste inside, wrapped with a pickled cherry leaf. The Eastern Japan type is a pink rice pancake with bean paste inside, also wrapped with a cherry leaf. These leaves are edible. The saltiness compliments the sweet snack.)

On May 5 is Boy's Day, renamed Children's Day because for some reason if you have Girl's Day it's fine, but Boy's Day is sexist. March 3rd is not a national "rest" day, but Children's Day is. It is part of a three day holiday called Golden Week, which, combined with April 29th, can make a nice long holiday for company workers who can take time off.

We celebrate it by putting up carp flags on a pole outside of the house. Usually at least three carp. One big blue one as the father, One a little smaller red one as the mother, and another color for the child(ren). People often also have a warrior's helmet as a decoration inside the house if they have boy children (as opposed to the dolls for Girl's Day). I used to have one of those helmets when I was small. I think my parents got it as a gift for some unknown reason, me being a girl (an only child) and all.
Kodomonohi
(Pictures of the cylindrical cloth carp "flags" lifting horizontally in the spring breeze and a traditional warrior helmet decoration.)
The snack designated for this day is Kashiwamochi.

Kashiwamochi
(Picture of kashiwamochi - a white rice cake folded over bean paste, wrapped in a big leaf. This leaf is just so the rice cake can be transported without sticking or drying out.)

Also, as part of my own heritage, we celebrate Easter - more as a Spring celebration and business event than as the Christian holiday. It is used as an excuse to enjoy the cherry blossoms - also called Hanami. When I was a child, my mother would make Easter bread called Paska every year. This is a bread with lots of eggs in it, baked in a round tin. It is my dad's heritage, since his grandparents came to Canada through the Ukraine. They were Mennonite Brethren (sort of similar in beliefs to Amish), one of the founding fathers in Holland, who were forced to move to Germany and then to the Ukraine and finally to North America due to their believe in non-violence. The Mennonites took with them the Ukrainian Paska recipe with them and it became part of their Easter tradition.

Anyway, I carried on this tradition and actually made Paska for the event participants for many years until hubby told me it was too time consuming and costly. I sometimes still make it for my family.

2) How do you celebrate it?
Answered that above.

3) How was your celebration different in 2020 and/or 2021?
No difference since it is a private celebration without need of partying.  I think we cancelled the Easter Picnic in 2020 but resumed in 2021.

4) What special foods do you make or acquire for your spring holiday?
Also answered above.

5) Is there special music for your spring holiday?
There is a famous children's song for Setsubun, Girl's Day, and Children's Day

  ***********************


I had to write today, not only because it is Friday, but because everything is going well but I am not feeling it. I think it's because I am worried about the Easter Picnic. It's not like I have to prepare much for it, and I've done it for so many years it is not worth any worry but I just don't really enjoy the thought of "an event." Especially one I am leading. I have this nervous feeling in my stomach all the time. It will be fine once I get into it - it's just the waiting that's killing me.

What we usually do for our Easter picnic is hide Easter eggs around the park for the kids to find, go through some preposition and nature vocab like "under the tree" or "in the grass", then after they find the eggs and tell me where, we separate into families and eat the lunches we brought individually. Then, as the kids finish their lunches, we go on a nature search to recognize Spring, and do some activities on a checklist individually with their parents, like kite flying, playing with a ball, grass sledding etc. At the end we get together for some group games like egg racing and What time is it Mr. Wolf depending on the age of the kids. It is the same every time, and it would be nice to have something different to do... any ideas?!

Today went to a party wholesale warehouse to get some stuffings for the (plastic) Easter Eggs. I was going to just put little chocolate eggs inside, but realized that some of the smaller kids maybe are not allowed chocolate. I'm thinking maybe puzzle erasers might be something they'd enjoy.

Yesterday the weather was nice and the cherry trees at the park were full of blossoms so I got a lot of pictures. Hana usually doesn't sit and pose for me, but I had a few plastic bags I rustled which tricked her into thinking I had snacks and I got a few good pics :D

Unfortunately, it rained quite a bit last night and I am afraid many of the blossoms fell. I hope we have some left for Sunday!

On to books - I read the first Dune book. It was interesting enough that I finished it, but it was not as good as I remembered it to be. Specifically, the description was seriously lacking so that not only could I not see it in my mind, the situation was very hard to grasp. Also, the main character being a super human (smarter than a computer, the strongest fighter, having the power to read the future) with few relatable qualities - it is ok for the first book, but I don't know if I want to keep reading the second, the beginning of which has turned me off considerably. Reading about a revolution leader against tyranny is fun, but reading about a hero turned emperor being cruel, making errors and accumulating enemies, not so much. Not in my present frame of mind anyway.

I started reading Dune because I was getting tired of watching TV - more specifically rewatching shows I'd already watched like Agents of SHIELD. I did finish watching the second season of Bridgerton and enjoyed that. I like that they are setting the stage for other romances to give them more focus in future seasons. Yay the Bold Type is back! I've started watching that now and it's looking interesting :)

Also, I suddenly felt like going to my old diaries from high school and over and reading them over.  They are all quite interesting and reminding me of events I had totally forgotten.  I might introduce some anecdotes that could be entertaining.

Now to Hana and cherry blossom pictures from the park -
















Date: 2022-04-01 03:41 pm (UTC)
susandennis: (Default)
From: [personal profile] susandennis
i love the detail about the holidays - not anything i've read before. i live in seattle and we are a wash in cherry blossoms. i've lived here now for more than 30 years and they still surprise and delight me every year.

Date: 2022-04-02 12:43 am (UTC)
susandennis: (Default)
From: [personal profile] susandennis
wow. you are nearly a native and, yeah, it is a wonderful place. i look forward to reading more about your Japan.

Date: 2022-04-01 08:41 pm (UTC)
kyararose: (Daniel Jackson)
From: [personal profile] kyararose
Lovely photos. I am not religious so I just use Easter as a family holiday to be together. My mom claims to be religious but doesn't do anything to celebrate in that way lol.

Date: 2022-04-02 12:47 am (UTC)
kyararose: (Tesla)
From: [personal profile] kyararose
Thanks! I hope you do too!

Date: 2022-04-01 11:07 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] dandylover1
Your descriptions are truly amazing, as was all of the history and explanations of the holidays. I hate political correctness with a passion, and I firmly agree with you about Girls' and Boys' Day. It was quite ridiculous to change the name of one and keep the other. As for the erasers, be careful with those. If they are truly small children, you don't want them putting these in their mouths. Chocolate, at least, is safe to eat. Thank you for writing such a lovely entry.

Date: 2022-04-02 12:23 am (UTC)
alefy: (Default)
From: [personal profile] alefy
I totally absolutely love cherry blossoms- we get them here (Melbourne, Australia), too, during our Springtime.

I really enjoyed reading about the holidays. Thank you for sharing.

I do not understand how Easter celebration is expensive? I was born into middle-eastern culture, so Easter wasn't a thing for me growing up- but my husband, an Australian by birth as well as choice, has a lot of family things during Easter- it is just meeting up with his mum and sister and sharing some food. I enjoy it a lot.

Date: 2022-04-02 04:05 am (UTC)
alefy: (Default)
From: [personal profile] alefy
I see. It does make sense now.
Thanks for explaining. :)

Date: 2022-04-03 04:39 am (UTC)
anirrationalseason: (Sehnsucht)
From: [personal profile] anirrationalseason
It was nice to read how you celebrate Easter and special Japanese holidays. I looked up paska and it looks yummy. Also, wow, those cherry blossoms are so pretty! My husband and I want to visit Japan in springtime and experience hanami someday.

(Hana has a great smile!)

Date: 2022-04-06 08:05 pm (UTC)
cdayzee: (cat face)
From: [personal profile] cdayzee
My mom's side of the family are all Mennonites!! I've not met anyone else with this heritage.

Date: 2022-04-07 02:30 am (UTC)
cdayzee: (church)
From: [personal profile] cdayzee
My mom is from central Kansas. Most of the group that came over settled there. So many of them were inter-related.

I didn't know that there was such a big population in Canada as well.

Very interesting!

Date: 2022-04-15 07:13 am (UTC)
spiralicious: Cereal Killer Mask (Default)
From: [personal profile] spiralicious
Loved reading about the holidays. I knew a bit about them, but I learned something new about each of them.

Sounds like you put on a wonderful event.

Wonderful pictures and Hana is so cute.

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