Steam rolled off the copper-ringed picket bowl and the candy aroma of freshly cooked rice rose towards us. I leaned in for a style. The grains had been tender, pleasantly sticky, and subtly brightened with rice vinegar. Our host, Prairie Stuart-Wolff, confirmed us find out how to moist our palms with calmly vinegared water and gently form the rice into small balls that will change into temari sushi.
“It must maintain its form so you’ll be able to pack it and transport it,” she mentioned. “However for those who squeeze too laborious, the rice turns into this glutinous ball.”
After shaping, we draped a contemporary kinome, or sansho-pepper leaf, over every pillow of rice and topped it with a slice of sea bream so translucent we might nonetheless see the herb beneath it. I sneaked a chunk: earthy, natural, delicate, candy. It tasted like spring.
We had been standing within the open, wood-paneled kitchen of Mirukashi Salon, a hyper-seasonal culinary retreat set within the hilly countryside of Kyushu, the southernmost of Japan’s 4 fundamental islands. It was March, and I had include my associate, Laila, in hopes of catching the primary buds of Japan’s famed cherry-blossom season.
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Prairie Stuart-Wolff/Courtesy of Mirukashi Salon; Rebekah Peppler
A gentle drizzle had greeted us the day earlier than once we stepped off the prepare within the close by metropolis of Fukuoka. Early springtime, Stuart-Wolff informed us, is a turbulent season in Kyushu. “We get a number of rain. We get a number of wind. Spring is preventing to essentially bloom.”
Stuart-Wolff has a relaxed, assured air. Ask her a query (I requested many) and she or he has a prepared and thorough reply. That hadn’t all the time been the case, she informed me. When she first moved to Japan from Maine in 2007 together with her now spouse, Hanako Nakazato, who’s a 14th-generation ceramist, she didn’t converse a phrase of Japanese. Since then, she has not solely discovered the language however has additionally change into steeped within the island’s culinary traditions—its recipes, methods, and information—and now passes them alongside to guests.
On our five-day retreat, Laila and I had been joined by 5 different vacationers. We foraged for watercress; cooked a scorching pot with wild boar, seaweed, and enoki mushrooms; and went on subject journeys to fulfill artisans, small producers, and cooks at their ateliers and eating places.
Prairie Stuart-Wolff/Courtesy of Mirukashi Salon
Once we awakened on the Karatsu Seaside Lodge on the primary morning, the rain had stopped and the skies had been a vibrant blue. To take benefit, Stuart-Wolff determined that, as an alternative of the deliberate pottery tour, we’d participate in hanami, the Japanese customized of gathering below a cherry-blossom tree and admiring its ephemeral magnificence. “They’re celebrated culturally as a result of they’re so fleeting,” she mentioned. “We pack a picnic and go sit below the cherry blossoms, and simply deliberately enjoy that feeling.”
After our grasp class in making temari sushi, we packed the rice balls into tidy packing containers and stashed them into baskets together with chilled bottles of sake, carafes of tea, jars of umeboshi (salted bitter plums), and a clutch of ceramic cups. But it surely turned out the blossoms weren’t fairly prepared. After a half-hour driving round on the lookout for cherry timber in bloom, we settled for a scenic spot below a tree with tiny pink buds overlooking Karatsu Bay. The picnic was pleasant, regardless of the absence of full blooms, and I capped it off with a light-weight nap below the solar.
Rain and wind returned the next day, so we gathered again within the kitchen for a lesson on dashi—the important broth of Japanese cooking, which we made with kombu (a seaweed harvested in Hokkaido, Japan’s northernmost island) and katsuobushi, or dried bonito flakes (produced in Kagoshima, within the south). The important thing to drawing out the umami and sweetness from the kombu with out the bitterness, Stuart-Wolff defined, is to take away the seaweed simply earlier than the water reaches a boil. The katsuobushi is then added and steeped for a minute earlier than being strained out.
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Prairie Stuart-Wolff/Courtesy of Mirukashi Salon
Over the following few days, we made essentially the most of breaks within the rain to forage for slender stalks of tsukushi (horsetail), as effectively as tightly coiled warabi (bracken fern) that we used to make tempura. We spent one afternoon at Itoaguri, an outdated sake store within the metropolis of Itoshima, tasting completely different types of namazake, or unpasteurized sake.
On one other day we visited Monohanako, the pottery studio run by Nakazato, Stuart-Wolff’s spouse, which was positioned simply behind the salon. Her fashionable, minimalist items—similar to a black bowl with a double lip and a beige cup with a crackled, rustlike patina—had already made frequent appearances on the salon. “Aesthetics play such a key function within the expertise of consuming in Japan,” Stuart-Wolff mentioned as we sipped glowing sake out of Nakazato’s white-glazed goblets. Simply as the selection of substances shifts with each season, so too does the selection of vessel. “I love how they’re in live performance with one another.”
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Prairie Stuart-Wolff/Courtesy of Mirukashi Salon
On our remaining day, we had one other break within the rain, so we walked a couple of minutes to a terraced plot of land with chestnut timber the place the salon’s new location was being constructed. I took word, and started dreaming of a purpose to return. Throughout my go to, the salon was set inside Nakazato’s household residence, however the brand new house opened final October, simply in time for the rice harvest season. It options an open kitchen with an enormous spherical desk, and there are plans for a vegetable backyard.
Strolling again, with views of Karatsu Bay within the distance, I requested Stuart-Wolff if she had seen any similarities amongst her company. She paused to contemplate. “I’m actually stunned by the variety of folks on their first journey to Japan,” she mentioned. “I thought it will be individuals who had been returning and on the lookout for new experiences. However what I’ve realized is that we are able to provide a context and a lens into the tradition.”
I might attest to that, it being my first journey to Japan, too. Whereas we went on to go to the traditional temples of Kyoto and the brilliant, busy streets of Tokyo, it was in Kyushu—and particularly, on the massive spherical desk within the salon’s kitchen—that I felt most linked to the deeply rooted culinary traditions of Japan.
4 nights at Mirukashi Salon from $3,550 per individual, all-inclusive.
A model of this story first appeared within the Might 2025 challenge of Journey + Leisure below the headline “Spring Awakening.”