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I have a question for reality shifters. Do you keep skills you pick up in your DR or do they go away? For example if you were to shift to food wars and joichiro teaches you cooking skills, would you keep said skills. Or if you studied a language in your DR would you retain the language. Hell even if you study a sport would you be knowledgeable on the sport?
I’ve been watching Food Wars and seriously wanted to draw something serious and nice but…well this is what I came up with xD
A very good Alice that I thought would make some cute icons.
Imagine the characters from Shokugeki no Souma in a MHA au. Quirks and superheroes exist, but they all still want to be chefs. Perhaps Lunch Rush is a Totsuki graduate?
Totsuki lets students use their quirks to cook and gets them licensed for quirk use in the workplace.
Everyone’s quirk is mostly related to their canon cooking specialty. So, Erina’s quirk is, of course, God’s Tongue, Akira’s is enhanced smell and so on.
Souma... Being quirkless would totally fit his “low-class” diner, underdog theme but I actually like the idea of him having a quirk that’s really weird, unrelated to cooking, or dangerous... Like decay.
Like, everyone would assume it just makes food compost quickly and sneer, but then they actually see him use it in a competition to get rid of some non-organic rubbish.
‘Food decay? No, it works on everything. Even my own body. Why do you think I wear these medical grade rings all the time?’
Quirks do need frequent use for control though, and Souma decays all the non-recyclable-burnable-composting rubbish for the Polar Star dorm.
I wonder what would happen if Victor Nikivorof ate a pork cutlet bowl cooked by someone from Shokugeki no Soma? Would he take a bite and suddenly picture Yuri skating?
Dong Po Pork Curry Don from Shokugeki no Souma. This is the first time I’ve cooked a meal for @onionchoppingninja; it was always her cooking for me. Dong Po pork normally doesn’t contain spices, but adding in the spices Nikumi mentioned gave it a fragrant and savoury taste. It was a tedious dish that took about 3 hours to make, but the results were worth it. The rice had a numbing taste that counteracted the oiliness of the meat. Onionchoppingninja said that the meat was juicy and syrupy, which was as the manga described.
Dong Po Pork (serves 3~4)
800g pork belly with skin and nice alternating layers of fat and lean meat
3 bunches of spring onions
2 thumbs size knob of ginger, thinly sliced
2 cups Shao Xing Hua Diao wine
0.5 cup light soy sauce
0.5 cup brown sugar
1 tbsp dark soy sauce
3 star anise
2 teaspoon of Sichuan peppercorns
2 tablespoons of cornstarch
Method:
Cut the pork belly to pieces of the desired size. Parboil until the surface turns white.
Cut off and shred the white end of the spring onions. This can be done by holding one end while scoring the other finely with the sharp tip of a knife, then switching the ends and repeating.
Line a huge pot with the green spring onions. Scatter the ginger slices over them. Place the pork belly skin side down on the spring onions. This is in order to render out the fat on the skin side.
Add in the soy sauce, brown sugar, star anise, Sichuan peppercorns. Pour in the Shao Xing wine.
Bring to a boil, then let the meat simmer for 2 hours, flipping once during the middle.
Remove the meat from the sauce and steam on high heat for 30 min. This step is extremely important in order to ensure the glossiness of the skin.
Mix cornstarch with a little water and add it the hot sauce while stirring.
To serve, pour the sauce over the meat.
Rice with Tengjiao Oil and Rock Salt
3 handfuls of Sichuan peppercorns (no idea what tengjiao is, and couldn’t find tengjiao oil in supermarkets, but this should be pretty close)
~100ml oil with no taste, like canola oil
2 cups rice
Pinch of salt
Method:
Cook the rice.
Infuse the oil with the Sichuan peppercorns. This is done by heating the oil in a pan with the peppercorns. Heat with stirring till the peppercorns pop. Remove from heat and leave aside.
When the rice is done, add the salt and oil and mix well (with the peppercorns filtered out).
To Assemble:
Blanch bok choy in boiling water.
Divide the rice into deep and wide bowls.
Arrange the pork belly skin up on the rice. This can be made easier by denting the rice slightly with a spoon so that the meat can sit snugly and not fall over. Place the blanched bok choy on the sides of the meat.
Pour the sauce over the meat and bok choy.
Top with the shredded spring onions.
Dig in!