2011-02-24

Tsukiji Fish Market



SUSHI FOR BREAKFAST, ANYONE?

One of the MUST-DO things in Tokyo is the Tsukiji Fish Market. For those who view food as the single best cultural indicator of a people, Tsukiji is the embodiment that consolidates the Japanese culture into a pin point experience.

Japanese food is all about fish and Tsukiji is the largest fish market in Japan, if not the world.

I need to define the geography and protocol of Tsukiji. The area is huge and divided into the Inner Market and Outer Market.

You will hear intrusive descriptions of 3:00am wake-ups. This rarefied time is to experience the tuna auction in the Inner Market. While I do not discount the significance of this small part of the Tsukiji experience, I also do not think everyone needs to see the behemoth frozen sale of the day's top catch. Aside from the fact that the area is limited to only forty visitors per day, the thriving beehive of seafood activity is going strong at a more humane 7am or 8am.

To experience the Inner market it is best to come in rubber boots and grungy attire. What visitors are treated to are every sea creature known to man and then some. Octopus, squid, cuttle fish, mackerel, bonita, bream, yellowtail, urchins, eel, bright red fish, black fish, flat fish, blow fish.

If you are squeamish, stay away.

It is a slimy, squirming warehouse of rubber aproned males hacking and sawing.

The dangerous feature are the motorized jitneys which haul palettes of eviscerated fish from cutting table to trucks for delivery. It is the haste with which these jitneys scurry around the warehouse floor that has caused many an accident. The Tsukiji Inner Market is a working thrum of movement and the polite Japanese, as hard as they may try, have had mishaps.

What I recommend is heading to Tsukiji at 7:30am or 8:00am. Take the Oedo subway line to the Tsukiji Shijo station. It is a short 5 minute walk to the Outer Market.   As you pass through the Outer Market you can eyeball the many treats which will engage a more leisurely look once you have peaked at the Inner Market.  You will pass through a gated area to the warehouses which comprise the Inner Market.  Here is the blood and guts of the "fishy" activity.  Though the auction is long over, the real work, the cutting and hacking, the dividing and packaging is taking place. 

Be very vigilant as the sights will distract and the jitneys will get you !

After you have seen the Inner Market and taken 300 fascinating fish photos, return to the relative peace and quiet of the Outer Market.  Head straight for the closest sushi counter for the freshest sushi breakfast on this planet.  Itadakimasu = Japanese for bon appetite!
















































About Osaka

OSAKA, The Kitchen of Japan


I have 24 hours to discover the essence of Osaka. I always balk at the numerous articles condensing places into 24 to 72 hour bullet points. There are many cities which remain illusive even after years. As with friendships, some things must be earned over time not rushed.


So, it is with a certain reticence that I approach my short time in the third largest of Japan's cities.

My hotel is the functional, Swisshotel in Namba, a thriving district with a favored jumble of small restaurants, bars, coffee houses and shops. I head off from the Swisshotel with no preplanned destination. My map indicates a river so I amble in that direction and happen down a covered arcade with knick knack shops, coffee houses, restaurants, cafes, shops and more coffee houses, restaurants, cafes and shops, and then even more of the same. It seems never ending.


Are there enough people in Osaka to make all of these prosper?


While I ponder the city's ability to thrive in over abundance, I happen onto a street called Dotonbori. In this former theater district, the Broadway of Osaka, I find bars, arcades, clothing stores, more cafes, restaurants, coffee houses and discos.


I am getting it. Osaka eats and entertains.

2011-02-22

The Wonder of Baggage Delivery



HOTEL-TO-HOTEL BAGGAGE DELIVERY
I am the ultimate proponent of take only what you care comfortably carry yourself. Because of this credo, my normal suitcase is a backpack.

On this trip, I was given the opportunity to have my backpack shipped from hotel to hotel and may in future adopt a more liberal view of proportion and self-porterage.

Takuhaibin is a convenient service available in Japan for sending luggage door to door nationwide.

Here's how it worked for me: After two days in Tokyo, I was scheduled to travel to Kyoto. I got up the morning of my departure, showered, dressed, packed my backpack and took it to the lobby bell desk. I then proceed to board the Shinkansen Bullet train to Kyoto.

On arrival I was met and whisked to a Japanese French fusion lunch at the wonderful Okumura Restaurant in the ethereal Gion District . This was followed by a visit to the iconic Golden Pavilion, Kinkakuji Temple.

After a further stop at Kiyomizu Temple with it's breathtaking hilltop views of the city, I was taken to the Hyatt Regency Kyoto, next door to Sanjusangndo Temple. After check-in, there in my room I find my backpack.
Yamato Transport started the service in the 1970s and remains the market leader with their Takkyubin service. Although it is a registered trademark, Takkyubin commonly refers to takuhaibin services in general. Other major companies include Sagawa Express (Sagawakyu) and Nittsu (Perikanbin).

Tourists with limited ability to lift and haul their baggage can conveniently have it shipped from arrival airports to hotels and from hotel to hotel.

2011-02-21

Zazen in Kyoto




DOING ZAZEN.
Zazen is seated mediation. Zen integrated the ancient Indian methods of yoga meditation into Buddhism. Dogen the founder of Soto Zen who first defined the method of zazen in Japan, attested that "zazen is satori in and of itself." In zen sects zazen is the most important practice, the study of Buddhist scriptures is secondary.

Zazen consists of choshin (adjusting one's body), chosoku (adjusting one's breath), chushin (adjusting one's mind). Zazen is to attain enlightenment, our true nature or Buddha nature, a state of no-mind in which body, breath and mind are unified. Most of us pay attention to what is outside ourselves - looking, listening, talking - but if we turn our consciousness inward and place all attention into zazen, our delusion and attachment will peel away and we will realize everything is perfect as it already is.

There is a wonderful opportunity offered my Taizo-in, the oldest of the sub-temples amongst the Myoshin-in Temple complex in Kyoto to experince Zazen and satori. Founded in 1404, an outsider like myself can step back in time, create a seated space in the serene garden atmosphere of this Zen temple and empty myself of the traffic on the I-405, seventeen work projects that await my return, the responsibility of an aging parent and the six pounds I need to loose. The last is especially beneficial and worth the trip to this sanctuary.

                                                  TAIZO-IN TEMPLE
                                                   Kyoto, Japan
                                                   http://www.taizoin.com/


2011-02-20

The Shinkansen



THE SHINKANSEN


Many travellers to Japan feel that one must see Mt. Fuji to make their trip complete. While I don't disagree, I should not having climbed it six times, I do think the single best Japanese experience is the Shinkansen.

The Bullet train as it is affectionately know to us foreigners is a hyper experience of modern mechanization. It is a train like no other because it is operated by people like no other.
The hustle and bustle of any Japanese train station is immediately quelled when you step on board this platypus nosed creation. Immediately, and I mean immediately, the Shinkansen silently departs and the platform conductor bows to you as he sends you on your way.
Then the on board conductor trips the electronic eye and silently enters your car, he bows too. Graciously he makes his way to your seat, clips your ticket and as he exits the car, he bows again.
Next, the refreshments cart. A female attendant enters your car, she bows and lilting entreats you to bento boxes or coffee, tea, etc. Mesmerized, I watch as she bows again as she exits.
I have to go to the restroom at the front of the car. I quietly get up go to the door which opens as I approach. I get this now. I turn and bow to the car as I leave to releave myself.

2011-02-19

Roppongi




ROPPONGI DISCOVERED

In the eight or nine times I have been to Tokyo, I have never ventured into the quarter called Roppongi. Why you ask? For the same reason I did not get to Santa Croce until my third trip to Florence. For the same reason one cannot see everything in the Louvre in one visit. Life is all about choices. Sometimes we get to things immediately, sometimes it takes five or six tries.

I am staying at the Grand Hyatt Hotel located in the fashionable Roppongi Hills division of Roppongi proper. This is at last my opportunity to experience this neighborhood whose reputation is one of a foreign enclave where the greater percentage of non-Asian faces can be found in the crush that is Tokyo. The area is know for it's endless variety of bars, clubs and eateries catering to the eclectic needs of the Gaijin.

I arrived on a Saturday evening and the streets resembled Bourban Street, New Orleans on any weekend. These revelers were still out Sunday morning when I went for my jog; most were deeply hung over.
The main reason to head to Roppongi when in Tokyo is the abundant choice of reasonable eateries of every ethnic variety. All are within easy walking distance of each other. Add to this the hip vibe of a youth-filled neighborhood and you will enjoy the areas flash and energy.


JAL Premium Economy


ARRIVAL NRT=Narita Airport, JAPAN

I had the privilege of flying Japan Airlines new "Premium Economy." It seems that all airlines will soon convert their planes to add this third (or fourth) class between Business and coach. Currently it is a confusing transition. Some carriers like JAL have changed the actual seats other carriers have only dsignated an already existing area in the forward portion of coach, some carriers have fleets which are half and half. It is another of life's conundrums.

My advise at this stage of the conversion game is to check and recheck to insure you are getting what you think,

What I think: it's worth the extra hundreds while Business Class is oft hard to justify for the extra thousands.

The JAL seats are two-by-two pods. The shell is stationary, the seat(s) individually slide forward. The pitch was such that I could actually step over the passenger on the aisle next to me without his having to get up. This was a good thing as he was quite ill and didn't move or eat the entire 11.4 hrs.

2011-02-18

LAX - Tom Bradley Terminal


AT THE AIRPORT

Japan Airlines LAX to Narita. A pleasant contemplation of flying comes when I am boarding a Foreign Flag. Flight crews who will assist with baggage into the overhead have always been one of the top A-moves for this short person.
Most travellers hate airports. They are congested frantic places filled with maximum stress and McDonald's. I love them. For me they are the promise of a new adventure, a new beginning.
There is a cachet to the Tom Bradley Terminal at LAX. It is our city's international crossroads. Thousands of people going to exotic foreign lands, thousands of people coming from the same. When I fly from Terminal One I never feel the buzz of Bangkok or the veiled mystery of Dubai. Terminal One is for folks who only know the letters A - B - C. Tom Bradley is the promise of being lost in translation.

2011-02-17

Omiage - Japanese gift giving


DEPARTURES

It's 10pm, the day before, and the normal jumble of packing is behind me.
Along with my minamalist wardrobe, I have my backpack stuffed with Trader Joe's dried fruit. These omiage, gifts of arrival, are an obligatory gesture of Japanese society. Onerous for the giver, exciting for the receiver. Lest you think dried fruit common, in Japan the price tag is four times what I paid making my present and myself seem larger than life. Other sought after gifts are bottles of wine, Johnny Walker, all of which are far too heavy for my rule of: only take what 'you' can carry.