A circle of friends connected by goo touch! The “FIST BUMP” corner of the radio program “GRAND MARQUEE” features people who live and enjoy Tokyo in a relay format.
On December 12, Ryosuke Sugamata, owner-patissier of the patisserie “Ryoura” in Yoga, Setagaya-ku, will appear. We talked with him about his backbone, which is that he is actually not fond of dairy products, and the story behind the creation of his own style of sweets and store.
INDEX
The closest thing I had to sweets as a child was sweets made at home.
Celeina (MC): First of all, let me introduce your profile. Ryosuke Sugamata was born in Niigata Prefecture in 1976. After graduating from high school, he entered the world of confectionery and spent 3 years training in various places in France starting at the age of 26. In October 2015, he opened “Ryoura” in Yoga, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo, where he is the owner patissier. In addition to his store, he is also active in the media and workshops.
Takano (MC): Mr. Sakai, who appeared yesterday, referred to you as “the artisan who makes the most cakes in Japan.
Celeina: How many cakes do you make every day?
Sugamata: He was exaggerating a bit. (laughs) But I make quite a lot, about 500 to 600 pieces of fresh cakes.
Celeina: In one day?
Sugamata: Yes, every day. I also bake about 2,000 cookies and 500 to 600 macaroons every other day.
Celeina: What time do you start in the morning?
Sugamata: We start as early as 6:30 a.m., and from there we prepare for the opening.
Celeina: So the delicious sweets that we eat every day are made from the very beginning of the morning.
Takano: Really. We should all be thankful for that.
Sugamata: It’s okay, we’re having fun.
Celeina: Did your family have a confectionery shop?
Sugamata: I grew up in an environment where my mother’s family owned a Japanese-style confectionery, and my father made cakes in the Western confectionery section.
Celeina: So sweets were a familiar part of your life from a young age.
Sugamata: I thought they were a natural part of life. Since we were on Sado Island, there were no convenience stores nearby at that time. That’s why I felt that my parents’ sweets were the only thing I could eat close to home.
Takano: That is an enviable environment.
INDEX
Becoming a pastry chef even if you cannot eat dairy products
Celeina: Did you eat a lot of sweets since you were a child?
Sugamata: Actually, I have disliked dairy products since I was a child. I couldn’t eat any.
Takano: If you mean all of them, then cream is also a dairy product, isn’t it?
Sugamata: Not at all. Cheese is also a no-no, but I conquered butter in my third year of high school.
Takano:Conquered butter! (haha) How did you get over it?
Sugamata: I tried various ways of eating it. I discovered that it tastes like this when melted, or that it tastes good if you put salt on it. I gathered information about the taste little by little and conquered it.
Takano: Do you still have a weakness for whipped cream?
Sugamata: Not at all.
Takano: Fresh cream is the star of sweets, isn’t it?
Sugamata: Milk and other ingredients are commonplace in our daily lives, but when I heat it up to make sweets, the smell of the milk really comes out. That’s already too much for me.
Takano: Wait a minute, is there such a pastry chef?
Celeina:Mr.Sugamata, you are too funny, including your body language. You do taste the portions and other things, don’t you?
Sugamata: I do because it’s my job.
Celeina:Do you eat the food while thinking that it is your job?
Sugamata: I would like to avoid it if possible, but I can’t create the flavor without tasting it. But when I make prototypes, at first I can’t taste anything because I don’t like dairy products. From there, I gradually make it taste like something I can’t eat. Then everyone says it tastes good.
Takano: That kind of reverse sensor has evolved and become very sensitive, and we have become more trusting of taste.
Sugamata: I wonder. (haha)
Celeina: Unexpected and too punchy.
Takano: By making something that Mr. Sugamata can’t eat, you can make something delicious for everyone.
Sugamata:That’s right! That’s how I feel.
Takano: That’s interesting.
INDEX
If I made an effort using my inability as a springboard,making sweets became more interesting.
Celeina: Basically, do you have a fixed quantity for a recipe?
Sugamata: Of course, I usually use a fixed recipe, but when I first start making pastries, the amount is determined when I think, “Wow, I can taste the milk”.
Celeina:That’s where you make notes. (haha) What was the moment when you decided to become a pastry chef, despite having a backbone that is not fond of dairy products?
Sugamata: Somehow, …….
Celeina: Was it your parents’ family business?
Sugamata: Around September of my junior year of high school, when I had to think about job hunting and higher education. When I was on the edge and wondering what to do next, my father asked me what I wanted to do, and I was like, “Maybe a cake shop”. I guess it looked kind of cool that my father was making pastries.
Celeina: I see.
Sugamata: That’s why I got into this world somehow.
Takano: But you still find the work of a pastry chef rewarding and attractive, don’t you?
Sugamata: For now.
Takano: When you say “now,” do you mean there was a moment when you really got into it?
Sugamata: At the time, I wasn’t very interested, so I didn’t go to vocational school very much. But that didn’t help me get a job, so the teacher told me to come to school for a month to make sweets during the summer vacation as well. I couldn’t do what everyone else in the class was doing, but I couldn’t do it at all. I looked at the recipe, but the eggs wouldn’t foam, the sponge was dry, and so on. I was frustrated that I couldn’t do it, so I kept trying, and it became more and more interesting.
Takano: You never know what you will find.
Sugamata: Life is a mystery.
Takano: I would like to hear more, but I would like to play one song. I asked Mr. Sugamata to select the music. Please tell us about the reason for the song selection.
Sugamata:When I first opened the store, I often drove around worrying about various things. At that time, I often listened to Sakanaction, and I chose this song because it stuck with me strangely and made me feel like “I’m going to do my best.
Takano: Now, please introduce the song.
Sugamata: It’s “Eureka” by Sakanaction.