Showing posts with label Dining Out. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dining Out. Show all posts

12/05/2006

Dining Solitude in the City.

Finding solitude in Tokyo is no easy task, but there is no shortage of ways to cope. At this Chinese-style ramen restaurant, you first select your order and pay at a vending machine. After being seated at a booth for one at the bar, you mark your meal preferences on a paper menu (i.e., spicy or mild, light or fatty broth) and pass that to an attendant behind the bar. No eye contact is made, since the interface between customer and attendant is only a gap large enough to pass food through. Once your food is delivered, the bamboo curtain is drawn, and you are allowed to enjoy your food in a silent and distraction-free space.

In what was likely a social faux pas, I was able to make eye contact with David, a fellow gaijin, across the bar.

Chinese-style Ramen.
This is nothing like the meager packaged ramen that penny-pinching North American college students know so well. Here, the pork broth is homemade and served with a few hearty pieces of ham. Though enjoyable, I still find Japanese ramen to be much more delicious and healthy.

T

11/25/2006

Breakfast at Tsukiji.

Made with Loving Care.
I love sushi, but at 7:30am? After leaving the fish market, I opted for Soba noodles and tempura instead, and it was delicious!


More to come...

T

9/22/2006

Cleaning Up... On Sushi.


Not sure what to order? Sushi on a conveyor belt provides stimulating entertainment, a sense of responsibility (ie, "don't get that, hold out for something better!"), and a level of comfort with what your food is going to look like. Neon-yellow roe with mystery (and conveniently matching) yellow shreds? Uhh.. maybe next time. The only suprise is that this type of sushi joint exists in the gritty arcade in my neighborhood. The place is tiny, and everyone is huddled around the circular conveyor belt path.

The sushi was so delicious that I had forgotten to document the experience - until the plates were piled high. You're charged by the number of plates at your space. More sushi than I could eat (6 plates) + soup + green tea + beeru
(that's beer, for you non-Japanese speaking folks) = $13. Best value in town? I think so. Well, that's still technically splurging, considering that you can eat out for as little as $4. Who said Tokyo's expensive?


T