Celebrity Chef Harpal Singh Sokhi Returns From Japan With Lessons On Discipline, Cuisine And Conservation
Celebrity chef Harpal Singh Sokhi opens up about his recent trip to Japan, sharing insights on the country's discipline, green conservation efforts, knife culture, fugu fish training, and how Japanese cuisine's simplicity and umami flavour compare to India's diverse food traditions.
Celebrity chef Harpal Singh Sokhi is back from a recent trip to Japan, and the experience, he says, left a lasting impression on him - not just as a chef, but as an Indian eager to bring back lessons for his own country.
Speaking about his time in the country, Sokhi didn't hold back his admiration. "My experience of Japan was overwhelming. I think it is one country from where we should learn ethics, discipline, manners, cleanliness," he said. What struck him most, he added, was how seriously the Japanese take environmental preservation. "The way they are preserving nature, it's amazing. Green Japan is something to watch out for. I did not see any place that was not green. It was completely filled with plants."
He was equally struck by the country's resilience in the face of natural disasters. "The country goes through multiple disasters every year, yet they sprint back and get up so fast that you don't come to know of the destruction that they have gone through," he observed, adding that India has much to learn from Japan's approach to conservation - particularly when it comes to protecting trees and expanding green cover rather than cutting them down.
A Cuisine That Doesn't Try To Please Everyone
As a chef, Sokhi was naturally drawn to Japan's relationship with its own food culture - one that stands in sharp contrast to India's. "They have evolved with that cuisine and they're very particular about it. In India, we try to please everybody," he said. He noted that even hotel breakfasts stayed firmly Japanese, with little appetite for offering alternatives. "There, I found that the hotel breakfast was Japanese-centric and they were not interested in doing any other cuisine for that matter."