Harajuku that magibon visited - I ate Crepe

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Uploaded by on Jan 8, 2011

It is a queen of French king Louis XIII that I can say the biological parent of crepe. It was time when she visited the Brittany district. She ate the gullet which made with buckwheat flour and liked it very much. She took in Garrett to Imperial Court food at once.
crepe of the those days was a simple thing to burn the thing which mixed salt and water with buckwheat flour on an iron plate. It was the 19th century, and the materials turned into wheat flour from buckwheat flour afterwards, too. And crepe which used an egg and milk, sugar for came to be made. I equalled French bread in France and crepe was good at all home and came to be edible in this way.
I do not understand when crape came to Japan.
There seems to have been it in Japan comparatively for a long time. That crepe which we eat spread out is said now with the latter half of 1970's.
Thereafter the kind becomes abundant, too, and it is got close to people.

http://www.cafe-crepe.co.jp/shopcrist...

Buckwheat came to North America from Southwest Asia and also spread to Eastern Europe, where a similar meal called blintz also developed. In Brittany, crêpes are traditionally served with cider. In Italy it is crespella. In areas of Central Europe, the meal is called palačinka (Serbian, Macedonian,Czech, Slovak, Croatian and Slovenian), Palatschinken (in Austria), palacsinta (Hungarian), all these terms being derived from Latin placenta meaning "cake"). A cognate of the word exists in Romanian, "plăcintă", but it is actually more similar to a quiche than to a crêpe; the Romanian word for crêpe is clătită. In Danish it's Pandekage, in most German regions it's Pfannkuchen, and in Dutch it's pannenkoeken. The Polish version is called naleśniki. In the Spanish region of Galicia, they're called "filloas", and may also be made with pork blood instead of milk.

http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e3006.html

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  • Where can you get those fake crepes from that were on display???

  • @SamisonlineUK

    It is a town called Harajuku of Tokyo here.

    There are many crepe shops here.

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All Comments (5)

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  • @SamisonlineUK Go to Asakusa Kappabashi area in Tokyo.

    watch?v=S17e_NZNYVI

  • @ImaLanger

    It is Harajuku that is famous as a town of the fashions of the youths in Tokyo, Japan here.There is the crepe store of the number shop in the street of here. The Japanese style crepe is popular with Japanese women.Daisuke

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