Showing posts with label Guam. Saipan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guam. Saipan. Show all posts

Nov 14, 2016

Making Tatizas in Saipan

When John and I were in Saipan we learned how to make Tatizas (Chamorro snack made with coconut milk.) Tatizas are popular with the Chamorro people. By the way, the Chamorro people are the indigenous people of the Marianas. The Mariana Islands include Guam, a US territory, and the US Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands of Saipan, Tinian, and Rota. Coconut bread is also found in many other places especially in the tropics.  In Jamaica they make a pocket and stuff it with various fillings. In Honduras ladies with a wicker basket filled with coconut bread and rolls are often seen peddling them on the beaches.

The Marianas are an excellent destination and often overlooked by tourists, especially those on the East Coast.  When we visited we bought the least expensive air ticket to Asia and then used our frequent flyer miles to fly to Guam.  From Guam it was a short flight to Saipan; and, from Saipan the flight toTinian is very short. The takeoff for the flight from Saipan to Tinian is longer than the actual flight.  The Marianas are a good choice for those looking
for a relaxing, beach stay.  In fact, it is a favorite honeymoon destination for Japanese and Koreans. There is plenty to keep history buffs busy.  It is thought that the earliest people arrived about 6000 years ago and the islands were critical during WW II.
We enjoyed tatizas while at the Hyatt in Saipan where we learned how to make them by watching the chef as he prepared them.  It is rather easy.
Tatizas
Ingredients 
4 cups flour
1⁄2 cup sugar
1 1⁄2 teaspoons baking powder
1⁄3 cup shortening 
1can coconut milk

Directions
Mix together flour, sugar, and baking powder. Then add shortening to the mix with a fork. Add coconut milk and mix well using your hands. If dough is too dry, add one Tbsp of water at a time until dough is a little moist and holds together enough to make a ball. From the big ball of dough and then make six to eight mini dough balls. Roll out dough balls on a floured board until thin. Place rolled out dough in pan over medium heat (do not add oil or butter to pan) but you can brush with coconut oil if you want for more even browning. A cast iron pan or griddle is preferred. Use a fork to poke out any air bubbles. Brown on both sides. They can be served as is or get creative; they pair well with many things.

Nov 12, 2013

Remembering WW II

When John and I visited Tinian Island we rented a car and drove to North Field at the far end of
the island. North Field is in the process of being reclaimed by nature with most of the field overgrown. There are a few monuments commemorating units who served on the island, glass shelters over the two pits that once housed the atomic bombs, and some bomb shelters.  It was from Tinian that the atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Considering the impact of the atomic bomb on history I had expected a better preserved site.

For Americans WW II started in the Pacific on Dec. 7, 1941 and ended in the Pacific in 1945 yet it seems to me that much of the War in the Pacific has been overshadowed by the events in the European Theater. During the War in the Pacific 112 thousand Americans were killed or missing, 253 thousand were wounded, and 22 thousand became prisoners of war. For the Japanese 1.7 million were killed or missing, 94 thousand wounded, 41,000 became prisoners of war, and there were 400,000 civilian deaths. The figures are staggering and it doesn’t include the islanders who were killed. The numbers are staggering and each number represents a personal story.

Each pacific island has its own story. The Japanese invasion of Guam resulted in 21 deaths,
fourteen Americans and seven islanders. The island remained under Japanese control for 31 months until July 21, 1944. When I was in Guam I met Jackie, a friend of a friend on Guam. We stopped at a bronze WW II statue that included Jackie’s father, Francisco Jesus Cruz, who killed an enemy soldier and put on the dead Japanese soldier’s uniform making it possible for Cruz and his friends to gain entry to the Japanese camp and blow it up.

One unforgettable day John and I met Franklin Arturo who shared the story of George Tweed. Tweed was the chief radioman when the Japanese invaded the island. He and five other men slipped into the jungle rather than become prisoners of war. All were captured and beheaded but Tweed. He hid out for two years and seven months during which time he was protected by the Arturo family. Franklin recalls accompanying his father to the cave where Tweed hid. When the Marines returned to Guam, Tweed signaled the American destroyers with flags he had made and a pocket mirror. He warned them about the Japanese gun placements and asked to be rescued. Within five minutes of receiving his message rescue was on the way.

While Tweed was hiding on one end of the island at the other end some Japanese refused to
surrender and hid out for years. When Shoichi Yokoi, the last holdout, was captured in 1972 he said on his return to Japan, "We Japanese soldiers were told to prefer death to the disgrace of getting captured alive. It was not a disgrace to continue on living. It is with much embarrassment, but I have returned."  During the last battle of Guam 1,747 Americans were killed, 6,053 were wounded and on the Japanese side 18,040 were killed and 485 taken prisoner. I think the personal stories are often lost in the numbers but everyone who was touched by World War II has a personal story.