A spring-themed menu inspired by American and Japanese cuisine and decor evocative of a koi pond were all features of Wednesday night's White House state dinner honoring Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and his wife.
President Biden and first lady Jill Biden recognized the long alliance between the United States and Japan with the rare, time-honored tradition of a state dinner that draws from the traditions of both countries.
Singer-songwriter Paul Simon, who counts both the first lady and the prime minister as fans, performed.
Former President Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, actor Robert DeNiro, and billionaire Jeff Bezos were all on the guest list.
The theme and decor
The theme was "celebration of spring," a symbol meant to mirror the friendship between the two countries. A garden displayed blooms native to both nations, including sweet peas, peonies and hydrangeas. Glass and silk butterflies appeared on the dinner tables, too.
The starring element of the decor for the dinner was the floor, covered to make it appear as if guests are walking over a koi pond with lily pads and cherry blossoms. The colors green, blue and pink were central to the theme — green to represent the growth of friendship, blue to represent stability and security and pink to represent spring's essence.
The menu
The food is the center of any good state dinner. According to the White House, guests were served a first course of house-cured salmon; a salad of avocados, red grapefruit, watermelon radish and cucumber; and shiso leaf fritters.
Dry-aged rib eye steak with blistered shishito pepper butter, fava beans, morels and cipollini was the main course, with a sesame oil sabayon.
Dessert included salted caramel pistachio cake, a matcha ganache; and ice cream — cherry ice cream, with raspberry drizzle.
The evening's wines were from Oregon and Washington.
The guests
From Hollywood celebrities, to billionaires, to key political allies, the guest list was exclusive.
Kathryn Watson is a politics reporter for CBS News Digital, based in Washington, D.C.
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