Dwarven Kingdom.
This country situated in the western part of the continent is composed mainly of tunnels bored through mountain chains. As it offers a safe alternative to traversing dangerous mountain roads, merchants and adventurers alike travel through this country in great numbers.
But despite the large flow of people through the Dwarven Kingdom, it can almost be said that there isnât a single non-dwarf living here in permanence.
The reason for this is because this country is, as its name implies, a country for dwarves. To get this moody race to acknowledge an outsider and accept that person as one of their own is said to be even more difficult than defeating a dragon.
Yet in such a Dwarven Kingdom, there has been one human who has recently been officially acknowledged as a citizen.
His name is Juuzou. In this Dwarven Kingdom where various ingredients and cuisines are gathered, he has continuously birthed dishes amidst comments like âwait, thatâs not for eating!â and âitâs been altered so much that it doesnât have a hint of its original appearance!â
This is Juuzou, the role model for all Japanese chefs.
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At the mouth of an eastern road in the Dwarven Kingdom, the one in the direction of Fitzgald Empire, there is a certain restaurant.
âO~i, Master! Seconds, please! Large serving!â
âGot it, will bring it to you soon!â
In this Dwarven Kingdom where most architecture is stone-based, this small store stands out with its wooden construction. As it is lunchtime, the store is bustling with many dwarven customers. And the one standing in the kitchen is a man who appears to be in his thirties.
His mild face whose characteristic seems to be not having any characteristic is currently the very picture of seriousness.
âHey there, Juuzou. Iâve come as promised.â
It is a young female voice that addresses Juuzou as he is busying around.
âAhh, Bahra-san. Welcome.â
Juuzou-san turns his gaze to see a female with a small build whoâs sitting up straight with her hands on the counter.
She is a female dwarf, and her name is Bahra. She is the daughter of the carpenter who Juuzou-san had been greatly in the care of when he was setting up this store.
âThere are still many customers at the moment, so please wait a while. Would you like a dish on the house?â
âReally? Then please make me that âNapolitanâ from the other time. With extra sausages.â
âCertainly.â
Juuzou-sanâs courteous reply causes Bahra-sanâs face to light up like a flower blossoming.
As someone with a great disposition and good at cooking, Bahra-san is quite popular among the guys. The reason for this Bahra-san to visit Juuzou-sanâs store is because of a request of great importance.
âThank you for waiting. Hereâs your Napolitan.â
âThank you. Then Iâll eat it slowly while waiting for you.â
So saying, she takes up a fork, and begins digging into the red-stained noodle dish.
Incidentally, Napolitan is 100% a Japanese creation. If you show it to an Italian, you would get hit with a âwhat part of this is from Napoli?!â so please be careful.
Isnât it fine just dumping ketchup on pasta? Weâre Japanese, after all.
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âSo then, whatâs the new dish for today?â
âPlease wait just a little while longer. Iâve already finished making the preparations.â
It is now mid-afternoon after the lunch rush, and the number of customers has settled down. Bahra-sanâs expectation-filled words from the counter seating brings a wry smile to Juuzou-sanâs face as he begins cooking.
The request that Bahra-san has accepted from Juuzou-san is to taste-test all the new dishes that he plans to offer in this store.
Juuzou-san himself is strict about his own cooking, and he would never serve to customers a dish that he himself is not satisfied with. However, this is another world. And his customer base is dwarves. Their taste buds are different, and there surely are ingredients that they are averse to due to their culture.
Thus, as a solution to all such problems, Juuzou-san requested Bahra-san to taste-test his dishes, as she is the person over here who is the best at cooking and has the most reliable tongue among all the acquaintances that he has made so far.
âThank you for waiting. Here is a gratin croquette, and a curry croquette.â
What heâs serving today turns out to be the Japaneseâs beloved croquette.
Although this dish did originate from France, itâs become the lead example of a Western dish that has evolved so completely that itâs pretty much an entirely different item altogether.
âI can generally imagine what the gratin croquette is like from its name. But âcurryâ? Isnât it that dish that you were trying really hard to make the other time but gave up due to not having enough spices?â
âIâm surprised you remember that. Actually, Iâve recently become close with a merchant whoâs been helping me look around for spices. Thanks to that, I can now make something like curry, but unfortunately itâs still insufficient to reproduce the curry that I know. But still, I was thinking whether I could make something with it, and this curry-flavored croquette is the result of much struggling and testing.â
âHahh, I see. Well, Iâve never eaten âcurryâ before, so I canât imagine how it tastes based on the name alone.ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
Number 2 lead example of a dish that has evolved into something else entirely is curry. However, curry is apparently a name that foreigners made up to refer to stewed dishes in Indian cuisine, so there isnât any specific dish in Indian cuisine with the name âcurry.â
While weâre on the topic, the reason why Japanâs completely different curry is so thick is because Japanese back then would eat it with chopsticks, so the dish became like that to make it easier to eat.
Hearing people use chopsticks to eat curry rice might sound like a bit of a mismatch, but if you think of chopsticks and curry don1 then it should make a lot more sense.
Us Japanese like to put everything over rice. It just canât be helped.
âLet me start with the gratin croquette then...... mm, this goes together surprisingly well. But I think Iâd prefer the taste to be a bit stronger.â
âI used the recipe for gratin as is. Should I change it after all, to make it go better with the croquette?â
âNo need, itâs already delicious enough. The stronger taste is just my personal preference, and to make a different gratin for the croquette would be extra work. This store is being run by Juuzou alone, so itâd be best to keep the amount of prep work needed to a minimum.â
âI see.â
âBut youâd do well to put in more meat. Spring onions are delicious too, but, you know, meat.â
âSure, sure. You dwarves are always harping on about that.â
âOf course we are. We canât summon any strength if we donât eat meat!â
Juuzou-san smiles wryly as Bahra-san replies with a laugh.
âNext would be...... mm. This might be a bit too spicy. But I donât dislike this spiciness.â
Bahra-san takes a bite from the curry croquette and carefully tastes it while chewing slowly.
âIt doesnât taste bad...... but the taste is losing out to the spiciness. It would be better to make the taste stronger. This time itâs not my preference, but a serious suggestion.â
This time Bahra-sanâs expression is slightly disappointed and unsatisfied. Juuzou-san probably had expected this reaction, as he looks a bit down himself.
âAs I had thought. I also tried out many things, but I couldnât find the right balance. Unfortunately, spices happen to be out of my specialty.â
âDespite that, this is still quite edible. But adding it to the store menu......â
Once a dish is known to be not delicious, even if the store improves it later on, customers generally still wonât order it ever again. Thatâs why the two of them share the same view on not serving less-than-perfect dishes.
âGuess thereâs no other choice but to continue probing and experimenting. Since my real aim is curry rice after all.â
âYou also mentioned that âriceâ before, saying that itâs good but you canât find it. Did you perhaps manage to find it? Something close enough to your homeplaceâs rice?â
âNot yet, sadly. But Iâve heard that there is a new species of rice being grown in Keros, so Iâm pinning my hopes on that.â
As it happens, the rice being grown in Keros is exactly the rice of his homeplace, but naturally thereâs no way for such specific information to enter the ears of a mere chef.
But it seems that it wonât be far until the Japaneseâs soul food âcurry riceâ is fully reproduced in this otherworld.
The day when Japanese converge on the Dwarven Kingdom is drawing near.
âFuun. Well, Iâll also help look around a bit through my contacts. Seeing how fixated you are on this âcurryâ makes me really want to try it.â
âThank you very much, Bahra-san.â
âDonât mind it. Iâm doing this because I want to.â
Bahra-sanâs face while saying this is smiling brightly like the sun, overflowing with humanly charm.
âAhh, I really might be falling for herâ thinks Juuzou-san. But thatâs only if Bahra-sanââ
âOops, got some sauce on my ribbon.â
ââwas not growing a beard.
âBahra-sanâs braided beard is quite stylish, isnât it.â
âWhatâs this out of the blue? Youâre making me embarrassed.â
The Bahra-san who says that while running her hands through the beard sprouting from her chin is a maiden indeed. That is, if she didnât have that beard.
Today, too, this otherworld is at peace.
1 Don refers to a large bowl filled with rice then some topping. Whereas âcurry riceâ usually is served on plates, âdonâ is always in bowls, so it makes sense to eat the latter with chopsticks.