Top 1200 Japanese Food Quotes & Sayings - Page 20

Explore popular Japanese Food quotes.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Food can become such a point of anxiety - not because it's food, but just because you have anxiety. That's how eating disorders develop.
I believe that eating simple food in a healthy body with a clean conscience is more pleasurable, and infinitely more satisfying, then eating decadent food that makes you and your world ill.
I got so excited, just talking about hummus to the Food Network. I feel like you don't see a lot of hummus and challah and shakshuka on the Food Network and that was really the meat of the process.
I do not regard flesh-food as necessary for us at any stage and under any clime in which it is possible for human beings ordinarily to live, I hold flesh-food to be unsuited to our species.
What we are trying to do is to create a social business in Bangladesh, a joint venture to create restaurants for common people. Good, healthy food at affordable prices so that people don't have to opt for food that is unhealthy and unhygienic.
In terms of the contemporary food system we see a lot of racism currently. Obviously we have a large supply of food. A lot of people don't examine why that is the case, but there are a number of nonwhite migrant workers being exploited every day.
So somebody has talent? So what? Dime a dozen. And we're overpopulated. Actually we have more food than we have people and more art. We've gotten to the point of burning food. When will we begin to burn our art?
The food system is a very complex beast. There are people who are going to get their food at Wal-Mart or at Safeway; they're not going to the farmers' market. Those people need choices too.
Frankly, I was surprised at how generous the Japanese press has been to the idea of a foreigner running Sony. — © Howard Stringer
Frankly, I was surprised at how generous the Japanese press has been to the idea of a foreigner running Sony.
'Memoirs of a Geisha' is everything you'd expect it to be: beautiful, mesmerizing, tasteful, Japanese. It's just not very hot.
All of my books have been about authentic Italian food in Italy and bringing that message about simple and authentic food.
Much the way I want to know if my food is farm-raised, or wild, or if my orange juice is fresh or from concentrate. I also believe I have the right, and we as Americans all have the right to know what's in our food.
I never thought fashion was the job for me, because I'm Japanese. Clothes! That was a European, society thing.
I'm for catching every Japanese in America, Alaska, and Hawai'i now and putting them in concentration camps.
The Japanese put houses in among the trees and allowed nature to gain the ascendancy in any composition.
I was so bad with the food and alcohol in Nashville. If you saw me naked compared to what I looked like when I did Iron Man 2, when I was exercising every day - I'll get it back together, but I've never eaten so much fried food and white flour in my life, ever.
I first decided architecture was for me when I saw Le Corbusier's designs in a Japanese magazine in the 1930s.
Japanese movie "Be With You" served as inspiration for "Love Box." I couldn't fill up the album with just my experiences.
I respect the Japanese and especially like their execution and communication styles. Unlike the Koreans, they will not hit you from behind.
When I created Chipotle in 1993, I had a very simple idea: Offer a simple menu of great food prepared fresh each day, using many of the same cooking techniques as gourmet restaurants. Then serve the food quickly, in a cool atmosphere. It was food that I wanted, and thought others would like too. We've never strayed from that original idea. The critics raved and customers began lining up at my tiny burrito joint. Since then, we've opened a few more.
Absolutely, there is a connection between food and love. I always say, when there's love in my heart or I'm feeling particularly good, the food comes out that much better. And so I think Valentine's Day is a special day.
Unless it's done superbly, as in the Japanese film Gate of Hell, color can be a very distracting element.
I think you can find a lot of joy and inspiration through food. I think when you find depression and sadness and hopelessness, many times it's connected to certain food and access to quality and nutrition.
My favorite food in the world is Mexican food. I'm not a dessert person. I'm more of a crunchy, salty girl. I could live on chips and salsa. I would take a Mexican meal over some fancy French cuisine anytime.
I think it's good to eat a bit of everything, but when you eat too much junk food, it's bad for you and for your brain. You don't understand why, but you feel sad. It's because of the junk food!
When thousands of men and women work full time but need food stamps to put food on their tables, when they can't get health benefits, when they can't get paid sick days, then we must do whatever we can to stand up for them.
I had never cooked. I had never wanted any other food that wasn't from my mum. Her food is special. — © Ayoze Perez
I had never cooked. I had never wanted any other food that wasn't from my mum. Her food is special.
Turn the preparing of food into a communal affair by enlisting others to help with the chopping, grating, stirring, simmering, tasting and seasoning. When the cooking is finished, eat together round the table with the electronic gadgets switched off so you can savor the food and let the conversation flow.
If we want to improve American food and make it much cheaper, we should deregulate the food trucks and the other street vendors, provided they meet certain sanitation standards. Many cities have already moved down this path, and people are not keeling over with salmonella.
My mother lived in Holland, and during World War II was incarcerated in a Japanese camp for three years.
In 1970, Americans spent about $6 billion on fast food; in 2000, they spent more than $110 billion. Americans now spend more money on fast food than on higher education, personal computers, computer software, or new cars. They spend more on fast food than on movies, books, magazines, newspapers, videos, and recorded music—combined.
Most people don't know where their food comes from. We're confused about the fundamentals. How does our food wind up on our plates? How exactly is it that, when I flick the switch, the lights come on?
The creation of a digital agency is a reform that will lead to a major transformation of the Japanese economy and society. — © Yoshihide Suga
The creation of a digital agency is a reform that will lead to a major transformation of the Japanese economy and society.
Love and food are very similar in many ways. We can't survive without them, and they bring us great joy, and just as there is junk food, and you can become obese, there's also junk love.
After failing four times and after working for other people and realizing that nobody paid attention to the food like they should have, we wanted to just pay attention to the food and service.
Well, only Japanese may understand it, but I'm like a goat or something that likes high places.
I like spaghetti bolognese, I like baked beans on toast. I hate French food. I hate fancy food.
My sister Zoya and I have been exposed to the best of cinema of all kinds - Chinese, Japanese, Italian, etc.
To hear the Japanese plead for free trade is like hearing the word love on the lips of a harlot.
They [Japanese whalers] haven't produced a single peer-reviewed international scientific paper in 23 years.
The Senkaku islands are inherently Japanese territory. I want to show my strong determination to prevent this from changing.
Without a huge shock, the sleepy-head, ignorant Japanese will never wake up.
The Japanese chose the principle of eternal peace as the basis of morality for our rebirth after the War.
Near Marseilles in the south of France, bouillabaisse is a cult food. In Toulouse and Carcassonne, the bean-based stew cassoulet is a cult food. Spain has paella and a number of others. Italy has so many, its cuisine is practically defined by them.
We are spending millions, if not billions of dollars every year on programs to fight the childhood obesity epidemic while giving almost $2 billion of taxpayer money to the junk food and fast food industries to make the epidemic worse.
About 30% of fresh food is thrown away in supermarkets every day, although they will deny it. British households are throwing an estimated 30% of their food away, too.
The problem of the food price is structural. The growth of demand cannot be checked in that it is coming from middle income countries demanding more quality and more quantity of food. High demand is here to stay.
My fake Japanese was smooth enough to earn me the title of 'The Emperor of Pleasing Graciousness' in that country. — © Wolfman Jack
My fake Japanese was smooth enough to earn me the title of 'The Emperor of Pleasing Graciousness' in that country.
I have in mind repeated statements by Japanese military men containing threats against other states.
Whenever I see people with their collars up, I'm tempted to point it out to them like you would for someone who has a food stain on their shirt or food in their teeth, as if to say, 'Your fashion sense is so offensive I'm assuming it's some sort of accident you'll want to fix.
Many young Japanese were hearing for the first time the words of Native people from the West.
My favorite piece of technical writing: Assembly of Japanese bicycle require great peace of mind.
When I feel like treating myself, I'll either turn to food or clothes. Bad food. Expensive clothes. Ironically, I'm usually rewarding myself for a solid week of healthy eating or a nice paycheque.
The demand for beef in Canada remains strong because I think people in America, in North America, know that we have a very strong food safety system and that our food is safe to eat.
As the rising sun melts thinly frozen ice, so the Japanese Army is overcoming Chinese troops.
The animals were happy as they had never conceived it possible to be. Every mouthful of food was an acute positive pleasure, now that it was truly their own food, produced by themselves and for themselves, not doled out to them by a grudging master.
People have a lot of strange relationships with food. There's a lot more going on there than just, 'Oh, these crullers remind me of my childhood.' We have a darker and more complex relationship to food.
I'm a huge Nagisa Oshima fan. He was one of the most radical Japanese directors to come up in the '60s.
Tell me what you do with the food you eat, and I'll tell you who you are. Some turn their food into fat and manure, some into work and good humour, and others, I'm told, into God. So there must be three sorts of men.
Sometimes I miss out the morning's painting session and instead study my Japanese books in the open.
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