Dishes
Further information: okazu (or sōzai (惣菜?)); List of okazuIn the aforementioned stock phrase ichijū-sansai (一汁三菜, "one soup, three sides"?), the word sai (菜?) has the basic meaning of "vegetable", but secondarily means any accompanying dish including fish or meat. It figures in the Japanese word for appetizer, zensai (前菜?); main dish, shusai (主菜?); or sōzai (惣菜?) (formal synonym for okazu - considered somewhat of a housewife's term).
Read more about this topic: Japanese Cuisine
Famous quotes containing the word dishes:
“Truth is a clumsy servant that breaks the dishes while washing them.”
—Karl Kraus (18741936)
“Before she has her floor swept
Or her dishes done.
Any day youll find her
A-sunning in the sun!”
—Edna St. Vincent Millay (18921950)
“There has come into existence, chiefly in America, a breed of men who claim to be feminists. They imagine that they have understood what women want and that they are capable of giving it to them. They help with the dishes at home and make their own coffee in the office, basking the while in the refulgent consciousness of virtue.... Such men are apt to think of the true male feminists as utterly chauvinistic.”
—Germaine Greer (b. 1939)