4C -TheMichigahDM Wee hd:etc Magazine- rursd ; Aprit13',t2000 W North Campus eatery 1s worth the bus de for sushi fans r" . . - :. m ,. .. -, .a ..,....,, ,.. ,.. .. ,. TheMichi gan eiiy -Wekend, By Darren Rngh l North Campus. A Japanese restaurant up Daily Arts Wnter there called Saica serves the freshest sushi in town. It is located in a shopping Most Central Campus students at the center at 1733 Plymouth Rd. (just next University don't take advantage of the door to Blockbuster) and is a must for all other side of our school: North Campus. sushi goers. The word "saica" is Korean On my own, I've met people who didn't for flowers of many colors and varieties. even know that North Campus exists. The name symbolizes the restaurant's For all you oblivious individuals, I now objective to serve wide varieties of peo- have a reason for you to venture up to ple a wider variety of food. The interior of the restaurant is color- ful and trendy, implementing authentic Japanese decorations with bright orange and blue tones. It has a cozier atmosphere than sushi restaurants such as Miki and Godaiko, authenticating the Japanese theme with the food and dishes rather than the decor. This more casual ambiance is more conducive to dating. The dishware the restaurant uses is dif- ferent for every dish. For example, the dishes the soups, salads, sushi, teriyaki entrees and appetizers come in are all of different shape, size and color. This helps distinguish courses from each other. The menu is extremely extensive as it consists of a large number of appetizers, sushi, sashimi, noodle soups, fried and lighter dishes. I started out with a miso soup that was flavorful, yet not too salty (like so many versions of this dish). It included a well-proportioned blend of green onions, tofu and seaweed. My next dish was a salad appetizer in a ginger dressing. This dressing is so popular Saica even decided to sell it in 12 oz. por- tions for S3 and 2 oz. portions for S1. After soup and salad, I tried one of my favorite dishes, a combination of beef and chicken tataki. This dish consisted of paper-thin slices of cooked chicken and rare beef over raw onions with a ponzu sauce dripped on top. Ponzu sauce is the house Japanese sweet & sour, but with a much thinner consistency than typical sweet & sour sauces. This appetizer start- ed off the meal in stellar fashion. Next, my wide array of entrees arrived. I started with a large platter of sushi and sashimi. The sashimi, which is small bite-sized portions of raw fish, included yellowtail tuna, octopus, salmon and mackerel. The yellowtail tuna was my favorite of the four with a natural texture that tasted almost buttery or oily. A true sign of good sashimi is the persistence of the fish's natural flavors and not a gener- alized fishy or ocean-like taste. The yel- lowtail was definitely exemplary quality sashimi. The octopus was tasty, but the texture was very rough and took an annoyingly long time to chew. If you're on a date and need an excuse to avoid talking to an obnoxious companion, just order the octopus and you'll be orally occupied for plenty of time. The next piece of sashimi I tried was the pleasing and worthy salmon, but the last one I tast- ed, the skin-on mackerel, was my least favorite; it was too salty and had an over- whelmingly fishy flavor. Overall, the yel- lowtail and salmon were definite winners and quite impressive for inland sushi. The next dish I received, salmon smothered in teriyaki sauce, could have easily been my favorite at Saica. Many times, cooked salmon has a stringy tex- ture that breaks apart too easily, but this salmon was atypical. Its texture was extra See SUSHI, Page 11C ZEMKE Continued from Page 10C that I'll never park in a handicapped spot. Then a three-day train trip to Encino on crutches introduced me to warm weather in January, a national championship and the bar on New Year's Eve. The most interesting people I know, I met bussing at Sweet Lorraine's in late January '98. That's where the lesbian line cooks were unshaven and clad in flannel, and the words "drama queen" didn't only apply to the females. The owners are so crazy they hang their certificates next to their college degrees. One of my managers was the butt of every tasteless joke - an obese, gay black man named Orlando who was Jewish to top it off. That summer my heart was broken by a lofty host named Penney who played volleyball. She had the looks to kill, the strength to make it possible and the spite to actually do it. And even with all that drama I was still bored enough to be the Upsilon's hege- mon, cover volleyball, serve 40-plus hours a week and take 15 credits. My frat house was condemned twice our first week. I crashed my motorcycle, watched friends sniff their lives away, saw the great coach Gio retire, ran the Zemke Family Values Tour and then turned 21. An average night's tips that winter were $200, so I'd hit Eightball, Cavern Club or TC's Speakeasy with JenO and close the bar with barely triple digits left. That Lent I gave up drinking after a Daily road trip to see an old friend in Evanston on springbrea. Tien I watched my big brother Alex, whom I'm older than but still look up to, graduate. But I still keep in touch with one old high school friend - Case has been my Eastern connection and Windsor buddy. Last summer I ended up in Ann Arbor again, liberated Andrew Bushey's batting helmet from South Bend, Penney turned up again, I lived with a pint-sized lipstick les- bian dominatrix, drank till the Daily ceiling tiles were full, was fired for being 13 min- utes early and covered WWF with Rom. Now, I'm finishing my last year. The 'year iaid mybills with my a three-day (and person) tri1 in my stick-shift S-10, had a thinks she's a dog and inspir Jon Zemke in IM football. The most beautiful persor feminist who intelligently me, smiled through her improved my mood with a made my day with a night < the winter I opened up and out for JenO. Then I watche I've partied with my bes fought off my nemesis Hal SUSHI Continued from Page 6C smooth and its tenderness allowed it break up into perfect, distinct bites. In addition to Saica's food - which, as a huge fan, I prefer over Miki and Godaiko - the elaborate presentation of the food is what really separates Saica from most competitors. Every dish fea- tured many fresh fruits and vegetables, for a total of about seven or eight differ- ent colors each. The carrots were sliced to shoelace size, the orange peel raveled up in a circular formation, the cantaloupe sliced into bite-size pieces, the noodles placed in a spiral and the sushi and sashi- mi arranged on the platter with such pre- cision and perfection. As illustrated, the presentation was phenomenal, and makes Saica worth a trip by itself. The master sushi chefs behind this extraordinary venture both have more than ample backgrounds to argue their superiority. One trained in Korea for years before moving stateside; the other worked at Miki for ten years. Obviously, with Saica exuding its presence in Ann Arbor, the move from Miki was the way to go. My only complaint with Saica was its mediocre service. Although this might be due to cultural differences, my waiter was not so friendly and accommodating, nor my water filled as frequently, as desired. However, the manager was so obliging, it wasn't really an issue. Aside from the service, Saica serves the best sushi I've had in Michigan and nothing can obscure that. Anyway, ifI wasn't tak- ing notes at the time, I could have thrown down a few sake bombs and taken the meal to a whole different level. When it comes to going on a fun and interactive date or just hanging out with friends, sushi and sake is most a surefire way to go. If this is your choice of plans for a weekend night, just remember three key words: Sushi, sake ... Saica. «I nieverthht I coti1d teac JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily Saica, a restaurant near North Campus, dishes some fine sushi meals,. LIVE AND LEARN JAPANESE. The /aseda Oregon Transnational Program, Fall 2000 and Spring 2001, is a comparative US-Japanese Societies study program that mixes US-based and international students with undergraduates from the prestigious Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan. Three levels of Japanese language instruction are offered in addition to US-Japanese Societies courses in the humanities and social sciences. Scholarships of up to $1000 are available! For more information, contact: Waseda Oregon Programs Office (800) 823-7938 (503) 223-7938 info@opic.or ww vidpie.org Kathy Henderson had never considered herself a teacher. But when she heard that many of her daughter's third-grade classmates couldn't read, she decided to do something about it. She joined AmeriCorps and took charge of the school's volunteer tutoring program. Seeing the students' grades soar showed Kathy she had the ability to change lives. Now the director of a literacy program, Kathy says, "AmeriCorps was the most rewarding experience I've ever had. Service will always be a part of my life." o, Please visit AmeriCorps at: Education Job Fair Thursday, April 13, 2000 12:OOpm-4:3Opm Michigan Union For more information, contact Courtney Nicholas at (312) 353-0574 or E-mail: cnicholas@cns.gov I r , r >,