Being obsessed with Japanese Kit Kats becomes even better when the Kit Kats are supporting a good cause! In the aftermath of the March earthquake and tsunami, Nestle released the Tohoku regional Kit Kat nationwide in an effort to raise money for disaster relief. For every Kit Kat sold, Nestle will donate 10 yen to the relief effort. It is very unusual for a regional Kit Kat to be released Nationwide, and though I had already found this Kit Kat on a trip to northern Japan, I bought a few to support the effort.
This bright green Kit Kat is an edamame (soy bean) paste in what I believe is a mochi ball. I think this is edamame paste mochi, though I have never had Zunda before, so I am not positive. I love the bright green color of the chocolate, and I really enjoyed the taste as well. But most importantly, I enjoyed knowing that my Kit Kat obsession is going to a great cause. Please remember that while the devastation may not be in the news still, the people of Japan are in great need of help. It takes a very long time to recover from such traumatic events, and I encourage all of you to continue donating to the relief effort.
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Shizuoka Beach Angels
On the first MWR tour Angela and I went on after she returned to Japan took us to Shizuoka prefecture where we learned of a strange ancient legend/myth that must have had something lost in translation. We traveled to a picturesque black sand beach on a curved bay with a commanding view of Mt. Fuji. Except it was cloudy, so we saw no Fuji-san, but saw posters of it looking awesome. Along the beach were groves of coastal pines, apparently ancient, and many of them were tagged.
It was explained to us they were numbered to be either be protected from construction or have been treated against pests, not sure which one was true (our local tour guide spoke good english and was great but we had some trouble believing some of her answers to questions as they seemed THAT far fetched). As we walked up to the beach we visited a shinto shrine and were enlightened of the local history. We heard two legends.
The first: At some point in the past, angels saw how beautiful the beach was and came down from the heavens to bath in the surf. They would hang their holy garments on pine tree branches before getting in the water. At one such gathering of heavenly spirits a local fisherman happened upon the garments hanging on the trees and took some for himself. When one angel discovered she had no clothes she was in distress as she should not return to heaven without clothes (obviously). She came across the fisherman somehow and he made her dance for him to get her clothes back. End of story. There are statues of a dancing angel near the beach.
Second version: The angels come down and bath, and again a fisherman steals one set of clothes except this time he hides them in his home. The naked angel cannot return to heaven and turns to a certain local fisherman who happens to be nearby for help. He houses her, and they promptly fall in love and get married. They have a child and are living their life when the former angel discovers her clothes hidden in the home. When the fisherman comes home from work she is wearing her clothes and says goodbye, returning to heaven. He is left as a single dad. End of story. There is a statue of him holding a bit of angelic fabric and staring into the sky.
Those are the versions we heard, and everything in the area was themed around the legends of the bathing angels. In fact a fragment of the angelic clothing is said to be enshrined in the local shrine (which reminded me of medieval catholic saint relics). Our tour guide then informed us of a fact that I cannot believe. We were marveling at the black, very clearly volcanic sand (you can SEE Mt. Fuji) when she comments that the sand was white until a few decades ago when the shinkansen line was built (which is no where near there) and the associated pollution (electric lines) caused the sand to turn black. I think she was very environmentally conscious... but wrong. If pollution had been that bad, the ancient trees would have died...
But we had a good time and enjoyed a unique cultural experience! We never know what we will experience here, so come visit where everyday is an adventure!
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Kyoto on Ice!
It’s June, it’s HOT, AJ is waking me up at night slurping his water dish dry… so I am going to post about a snowy winter trip to the ancient city of Kyoto to cool off. Our first trip to Kyoto was in July 2010, on a one day trip to see the Gion festival about warding off evil disease kamis… I think, and enjoyed the few sites we saw. To save money and leave days (time off) we have utilized the base tours as much as possible, and while we want to spend much more time in Kyoto, we figured why not get a cheap tour to four famous spots in the city. The bus ride from the Kanto plain takes anywhere from 6-10 hours depending on traffic, but Angela and I have always enjoyed bus trips (perhaps stemming from all the band trips we took in high school and college). Leaving in the cold dark of morning, we were woken by a traffic jam on the freeway, caused by a blinding snowstorm. The bus plowed through and we arrived in Kyoto on time.
Our first stop was Kiyomizu-dera (清水寺), an ancient Buddhist/shinto complex built along the side of a mountain stream/water fall that has some purification significance. To get to the complex we had to walk through narrow streets full of street vendors selling shrine trinkets for pilgrims and tourists while in increasing snow flurries.
We walked past the pagoda and through an old building built in the 1600s, with a gigantic wooden stage. The stage was cordoned off as it was explained to us that it was constructed without a single nail… pretty incredible!
Since we don’t really understand the language or cultural subtleties, we always come across something we think is completely random but must make perfect sense to the Japanese. Located within the complex was a small Shinto shrine dedicated to finding your soul mate, we think. There were two “lovers” stones with an associated legend we did not grasp, and were instructed that if a couple stands at each stone some indication of their love or compatibility would be manifested. Again, I am not really sure what we saw, but took pictures of the sign in English!
Kiyomizu-dera is known for its pure water pouring out a rock waterfall into three distinct streams. Each one symbolizes health, longevity, or success, respectfully, and as a visitor you would stand in line to use a long wooden cup to scoop up the water you desired. Except we were freezing and did not want to get cold, but watched others in our tour group drink to health, longevity, or success!
We had some free time so wandered around the commercial district, accepting hot green tea and purchasing regionally flavored kit-kats (success!). We also tempted fate on some cursed stairs. According to our tour guide if you slipped down this particular set of stairs you would die within three years. Angela and I walked carefully and made it without falling, so good for us!
After thawing out on the bus we drove quickly to our second stop, the Moon Bridge of Togetsukyo on the outskirts of town. On an picturesque shallow river in the rolling mountains was a 20th Century reproduction of a 12th Century bridge emperors in the past would utilize to get to an important shrine across the river. Around the bridge was a park and numerous stores and restaurants with rickshaw pullers waiting for tourists. Except an exceptionally sharp windchill prevented anyone from wanting to spend much time outside, and we really didn’t understand what was so significant about the bridge (it had been rebuilt with concrete and did not seem so special to us, but it was very cold and we didn’t understand its history).
The pour rickshaw pullers were jumping up and down for warmth. Angela and I walked the main strip looking for a good place to eat, eventually settling on a noodle place overlooking the river. We had hot tea, beer, and steaming udon noodles. The meal hit the spot exactly and off we were to our next tour on the whirlwind day.
Our third stop was at one of Japan’s most iconic images, Kinkaku-ji (金閣寺, Temple of the Golden Pavilion). An enormously wealthy samurai built a house with gold paint on a man-made pond in a beautifully sculptured garden. Somewhere in history Buddhists turned it into a shrine, perhaps for meditation, I am fuzzy on the history as we got a fly by explanation due the shrines popularity.
Despite the cold this was the busiest location we visited all day. Snow piles made the golden building stand out even more, and it sort of glowed when the sun shone directly on it. Apparently you are supposed to get there right at sunrise to get the days first full sunlight on the building for optimum viewing. We only had a few minutes to gaze at the building as a long line sort of pushed us through and we had to make our next stop. Angela was playing with her new dlsr camera I had bought for her and was pushed along with the crowd, but managed to get some good pics. We would like to spend more time at the Golden Pavilion, but in a warmer season.
Our last stop was at a Nijo Castle (二条城), a Tokugawa built complex with a wealth of history. We had actually visited hurriedly the gardens of the castle on our previous visit to Kyoto, but Angela and I had stumbled onto it and only had a few minutes. This time we got a great tour and got to enter the actual castle building. Nijo Castle was built by the Tokugawa shoguns in the early 1600s to give them a proper place to reside when visiting the emperor (they had moved the capital to Edo, or modern Tokyo which means “eastern capital”).
When the emperor regained political power with the Meiji Restoration, the last Tokugawa Shogun in the 1800s relinquished power to the emperor at Nijo Castle, and it is well preserved today. We had a great tour of the magnificent interior, resplendent with “nightingale” floors. The wooden floors surrounding the palace had iron hooks underneath them so when you walked on them they “chirped” announcing the presence of would be assassins (ninjas). While maintained, the floors still sang of our presence!
Large tatami floored rooms for the shogun and his entourage were painted with beautiful tapestries on the ceilings. We were shown hidden rooms where body guards would hide in case their samurai lord was in danger (apparently powerful people were marked men in the Edo period). And again we encountered samurai dressed manikins, as we have in virtually every historic place in Japan, which I find a little creepy. But we had a great interior tour we did not get last time, and then set off on a winding garden tour. It was neat, but frigid. I wish we had time to buy tickets to the tea house on property, as we could have warmed up to some hot matcha, but we had to press.
Soon our whirlwind day in Kyoto was over again and piled onto the bus. A great thing about Japan in winter is the vending machines found on every corner (even along hiking paths) that contain hot and cold drinks. We bought several cans of hot chocolate or coffee drinks and used them to warm our hands and neck. Soon I will have enough leave and some spending money and we intend on riding the shinkansen down to Kyoto to spend more than a few hours there, we welcome anyone interested in visiting one of the worlds most cultured cities!
Our first stop was Kiyomizu-dera (清水寺), an ancient Buddhist/shinto complex built along the side of a mountain stream/water fall that has some purification significance. To get to the complex we had to walk through narrow streets full of street vendors selling shrine trinkets for pilgrims and tourists while in increasing snow flurries.
We walked past the pagoda and through an old building built in the 1600s, with a gigantic wooden stage. The stage was cordoned off as it was explained to us that it was constructed without a single nail… pretty incredible!
Since we don’t really understand the language or cultural subtleties, we always come across something we think is completely random but must make perfect sense to the Japanese. Located within the complex was a small Shinto shrine dedicated to finding your soul mate, we think. There were two “lovers” stones with an associated legend we did not grasp, and were instructed that if a couple stands at each stone some indication of their love or compatibility would be manifested. Again, I am not really sure what we saw, but took pictures of the sign in English!
Kiyomizu-dera is known for its pure water pouring out a rock waterfall into three distinct streams. Each one symbolizes health, longevity, or success, respectfully, and as a visitor you would stand in line to use a long wooden cup to scoop up the water you desired. Except we were freezing and did not want to get cold, but watched others in our tour group drink to health, longevity, or success!
We had some free time so wandered around the commercial district, accepting hot green tea and purchasing regionally flavored kit-kats (success!). We also tempted fate on some cursed stairs. According to our tour guide if you slipped down this particular set of stairs you would die within three years. Angela and I walked carefully and made it without falling, so good for us!
After thawing out on the bus we drove quickly to our second stop, the Moon Bridge of Togetsukyo on the outskirts of town. On an picturesque shallow river in the rolling mountains was a 20th Century reproduction of a 12th Century bridge emperors in the past would utilize to get to an important shrine across the river. Around the bridge was a park and numerous stores and restaurants with rickshaw pullers waiting for tourists. Except an exceptionally sharp windchill prevented anyone from wanting to spend much time outside, and we really didn’t understand what was so significant about the bridge (it had been rebuilt with concrete and did not seem so special to us, but it was very cold and we didn’t understand its history).
The pour rickshaw pullers were jumping up and down for warmth. Angela and I walked the main strip looking for a good place to eat, eventually settling on a noodle place overlooking the river. We had hot tea, beer, and steaming udon noodles. The meal hit the spot exactly and off we were to our next tour on the whirlwind day.
Our third stop was at one of Japan’s most iconic images, Kinkaku-ji (金閣寺, Temple of the Golden Pavilion). An enormously wealthy samurai built a house with gold paint on a man-made pond in a beautifully sculptured garden. Somewhere in history Buddhists turned it into a shrine, perhaps for meditation, I am fuzzy on the history as we got a fly by explanation due the shrines popularity.
Despite the cold this was the busiest location we visited all day. Snow piles made the golden building stand out even more, and it sort of glowed when the sun shone directly on it. Apparently you are supposed to get there right at sunrise to get the days first full sunlight on the building for optimum viewing. We only had a few minutes to gaze at the building as a long line sort of pushed us through and we had to make our next stop. Angela was playing with her new dlsr camera I had bought for her and was pushed along with the crowd, but managed to get some good pics. We would like to spend more time at the Golden Pavilion, but in a warmer season.
Our last stop was at a Nijo Castle (二条城), a Tokugawa built complex with a wealth of history. We had actually visited hurriedly the gardens of the castle on our previous visit to Kyoto, but Angela and I had stumbled onto it and only had a few minutes. This time we got a great tour and got to enter the actual castle building. Nijo Castle was built by the Tokugawa shoguns in the early 1600s to give them a proper place to reside when visiting the emperor (they had moved the capital to Edo, or modern Tokyo which means “eastern capital”).
When the emperor regained political power with the Meiji Restoration, the last Tokugawa Shogun in the 1800s relinquished power to the emperor at Nijo Castle, and it is well preserved today. We had a great tour of the magnificent interior, resplendent with “nightingale” floors. The wooden floors surrounding the palace had iron hooks underneath them so when you walked on them they “chirped” announcing the presence of would be assassins (ninjas). While maintained, the floors still sang of our presence!
Large tatami floored rooms for the shogun and his entourage were painted with beautiful tapestries on the ceilings. We were shown hidden rooms where body guards would hide in case their samurai lord was in danger (apparently powerful people were marked men in the Edo period). And again we encountered samurai dressed manikins, as we have in virtually every historic place in Japan, which I find a little creepy. But we had a great interior tour we did not get last time, and then set off on a winding garden tour. It was neat, but frigid. I wish we had time to buy tickets to the tea house on property, as we could have warmed up to some hot matcha, but we had to press.
Soon our whirlwind day in Kyoto was over again and piled onto the bus. A great thing about Japan in winter is the vending machines found on every corner (even along hiking paths) that contain hot and cold drinks. We bought several cans of hot chocolate or coffee drinks and used them to warm our hands and neck. Soon I will have enough leave and some spending money and we intend on riding the shinkansen down to Kyoto to spend more than a few hours there, we welcome anyone interested in visiting one of the worlds most cultured cities!
Monday, June 27, 2011
Sakura Spring
Spring in Japan is bathed in pink, as cherry blossoms (sakura) awaken the dull winter landscape and life begins anew. Each year weathermen forecast the precise area for peak local sakura viewing with detailed maps, much like the fall foliage tracker in the Blue Ridge Mountains, but much more intense. Large crowds flock to castle parks and along river fronts to hold a “hanami,” a sort of picnic where one is to contemplate the shortness and beauty of life extrapolating from the brief life of the plentiful pink blossoms. Of course, that could be the sake talking as these picnics often turn into all day/night parties of a very festive atmosphere where offices will send out a person to hold their spot of ground and party until the moonlight illuminates the sakura. Commercially, the sakura season does well as stores sell any and everything Sakura themed. Starbucks even makes a Sakura Latte flavored with real petals here. The springtime Sakura and Hanami are very uniquely Japanese that took on a somber tone this year though. Sakura had just begun to bloom in southern Japan, on Kyushu, when the March 11 earthquake hit. Every year the military base here opens its doors to the locals and have a large Sakura picnic, as most of the major streets on base are lined with large, old Japanese Cherry trees. The base picnic was canceled as most families had evacuated, and Angela left without seeing any blooms. I didn’t even have a camera to take pictures of our very own Sakura blooming in our front yard, so I bought one and tried to enjoy the beauty. The trees really were magnificent, just sad this year. The petals became so voluminous that walking into a breeze it looked like pink snow, and streams soon ran pink with petals. A few short weeks and the blooms were gone, and a saddened country remained. Next year the Sakura season will likely be quite an event as Japan marks one year since the earthquake and will no doubt enjoy hanami again and contemplate the shortness and beauty of life (and I can enjoy it with a Hanami of our own with AJ, Angela, and myself contemplating the beauty of life, though AJ will likely spend it begging for food!)
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Singing Felines for our anniversary
This June marked Angela and mine FIFTH wedding anniversary… and quite a memorable and exhausting five years it has been. To celebrate, here living on the outskirts of Tokyo, we went to see a unique a production of an English play performed in Japanese. Since I met Angela, she has always been a fan of musicals, and have accompanied her to live performances of RENT and PHANTOM OF THE OPERA. While I usually tolerate the show for her sake, I was blown away by the Japanese production of CATS. In the past year a theatre company teamed up with Canon (the camera/printer company) to fund and construct a building specifically to house the CATS musical. The Canon CATS Theatre takes up prime real estate in downtown Yokohama, with its own train station, and has at least one showing per day since it opened last Fall. Since it plays so often, the theatre does not have to be that large and makes any seat you purchase close to the stage. With the building constructed specially for CATS, the entire auditorium is decorated like a junk yard (setting for the musical), complete with a circular, revolving stage. We bought what we thought were expensive but good seats not realizing any seat was good, and was excited to find out we were only a few rows from the stage. While I usually daydream a bit in musicals, I was very entertained and could follow the story, mostly, though it was all in Japanese. I had never seen CATS, and did not realize how much ballet type dancing was in it. Mostly I was impressed by the crowd interaction the performers had, at one point grabbing an audience member for a dance routine. There was only one point in the show I found myself a little lost as to what was happening, but overall had a good time and recommend seeing CATS in a foreign language. After the show we went to a quiet Japanese restaurant and had tempura and noodles.
I love my wife and can’t believe all we have been through in five years!
I love my wife and can’t believe all we have been through in five years!
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Bachelor Months
When Angela and AJ evacuated from Japan in March they left me with alone in a house with an 8 month pregnant Japanese refugee and her American Husband. While great people and company, I was working what seemed like 20 hours a day supporting the Search and Rescue (Operation Tomodachi) ops in northern Tohoku and couldn't spend much time with them until they went home to Ibaraki (for a healthy birth of a beautiful baby girl!). Thus myself and scores of co-workers found ourselves in an awkward situation where our dependents actually "deployed" away from home while we were left on the homefront.
Once work started to regain some normalcy we started to delve into unknown territory. Everything seemed hard and simple tasks required a late night call to our spouses on the other side of the world. For example, how in the world do I pay our rent? Do I pay in yen or write a check? Where do I take the trash and recycling? And the biggest one was in regards to food. I wandered into the unfamiliar commissary and came across several geographic bachelors staring at aisles, unsure of where items were. I had maybe been in the commissary two or three times in a year until this point and was extremely confused as to the placement of products (though the selection was VERY poor due to the fact that less produce was being shipped in due to the earthquake... because we won't need to eat in a disaster?!?!?).
I cleaned the house once all over and settled into a diet of quick turkey wraps, cottage cheese, coffee and alcohol. To deal with the stress of work, possible radiation, and family separation several of us at work developed an established bar routine on the weekends, enjoying the suddenly mellow local night scene (the Japanese had become very depressed and not out as much after the earthquake). One of the great things about Japan is the bars do not close, and stay open until at least dawn, so you can take a 0300 cab home, grab an anti-hangover "ginger" shot and be good to go (still not sure what is in these things but they are legit, and sold in every 24 hour convenience store). In addition to our hard drinking, we kicked off "Operation Keep Each Other Alive" where we each took turns cooking food. One person would barbeque, I would make enchiladas, and would switch off to make sure we were all eating. It was tough to the be the ones at home for once, without our spouses, kids, and pets, and it saddened us all.
Thankfully we survived, I now know how to pay the rent, made some friends with the local bartenders, and have Angela and AJ where they should be!
Friday, June 24, 2011
Our Japanese Hanko 判子
To be official in Japan, you must have a signature stamp, or official seal, known as a Hanko 判子. Instead of signing documents, you simply apply your family stamp. No signatures needed. I recently discovered that one needs a Hanko to open up a Japanese bank account, which I needed to accept a teaching job. I had no idea how difficult it would be to open up an account, but it took me an entire week. On Monday, I walked to a local bank and attempted to open up an account by myself. After a failed attempt at describing what I wanted in my horrible Japanese, the bank worker came back with a picture of a hanko stamp and a passport. Ah….I needed both of those to open up an account. Not knowing how to order a hanko, I contacted a Japanese friend who was fabulous, and helped me with every step of the process. She called a local hanko shop that could complete the task in two hours, wrote my name in Japanese for me, and then translated what I needed over the phone when my google translate app wouldn’t work. She is amazing and I am very thankful for her! We went with the cheapest hanko possible, but many in the shop cost between $200 and $300 dollars, with some costing upwards of $500!!
Based on extensive Wikipedia research, we learned that special hankos can be passed down from generation to generation, and many people will get new ones when their life circumstances change, like after a divorce, or a string of bad luck. But this is Wikipedia of course, so you can never be sure. We simply needed a banking hanko, so a cheap and quick material was fine for us. For banking, you always use red ink, but for personal mail, you can use a variety of colors. Back in the day, red ink was reserved for samurais and nobility, but today, red ink can be used by everyone, and it is used for all official documents. Armed with my hanko, I went back to the bank and opened up an account. I smiled the entire time I was stamping official paperwork. Very exciting indeed! I feel very Japanese now with our very own stamp.
Based on extensive Wikipedia research, we learned that special hankos can be passed down from generation to generation, and many people will get new ones when their life circumstances change, like after a divorce, or a string of bad luck. But this is Wikipedia of course, so you can never be sure. We simply needed a banking hanko, so a cheap and quick material was fine for us. For banking, you always use red ink, but for personal mail, you can use a variety of colors. Back in the day, red ink was reserved for samurais and nobility, but today, red ink can be used by everyone, and it is used for all official documents. Armed with my hanko, I went back to the bank and opened up an account. I smiled the entire time I was stamping official paperwork. Very exciting indeed! I feel very Japanese now with our very own stamp.
Thursday, June 23, 2011
WASASCO
Stuck in Asia and missing good Louisiana Hot Sauce? Don't bother looking for Tabasco, grab a bottle of Wasasco, your local Wasabi based pepper sauce to spice up your food! Order a mackerel/squid/roe topped pizza from the local Pizza-La but need to kick it up a notch? Look no further than Wasasco! Your mouth will never taste again!
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Kakegawa Castle
While on an MWR tour to visit a green tea plantation in fertile Shizuoka Prefecture, Angela and I got an impressive tour of a rebuilt Edo Period Castle. We have visited several castles in Japan, but had perhaps our best visit at this more rural reconstruction. The tour we were on stopped for lunch in the village of Kakegawa, a city located on the ancient Tokaido Road that had connected Kyoto and Edo (Tokyo). After a quick lunch in the tidy village, we toured the landmark dominating the landscape. Kakegawa Castle is located on a hill, with the "donjon" overlooking the complex and can be seen for miles around. Like most castles in Japan this is a reconstruction, as wood does not last long as a permanent building structure. Walking up the steep stone steps to the donjon, we observed a miniature model of the castle complex, then headed up to the donjon. The Castle Keep (Donjon) was apparently not for everyday living and only for defense, and thus is sparsely decorated.
Large rooms with few walls allow for defenders to respond to whichever side is imperiled by attackers. We took our shoes off and took the obligatory tour up and down steep stair cases and vaguely following the poor English of our tour guide. What was most impressive of this castle was the "daimyo's" residence (translated as a palace). The regional feudal lord, of the samurai class, would have lived in this really neat palace below the donjon. Surrounding the palace was a Buddhist rock garden with carefully raked rows of pebbles. Once inside, we took our shoes off and enjoyed the simple Japanese elegance of indoor design.
Sliding shoji doors separated large tatami floored rooms with few furniture items to be seen. Indoor gardens were visible along inner secretive walk way, and I was most impressed with the gutter system carefully moving water into tiny indoor streams. Oddly we discovered a room with the local kami (spirit gods?) costume for the local summer festival held every three years. We enjoyed the town, only a two hour drive south, so much we intend to attend the festival in OCT 2012.
Large rooms with few walls allow for defenders to respond to whichever side is imperiled by attackers. We took our shoes off and took the obligatory tour up and down steep stair cases and vaguely following the poor English of our tour guide. What was most impressive of this castle was the "daimyo's" residence (translated as a palace). The regional feudal lord, of the samurai class, would have lived in this really neat palace below the donjon. Surrounding the palace was a Buddhist rock garden with carefully raked rows of pebbles. Once inside, we took our shoes off and enjoyed the simple Japanese elegance of indoor design.
Sliding shoji doors separated large tatami floored rooms with few furniture items to be seen. Indoor gardens were visible along inner secretive walk way, and I was most impressed with the gutter system carefully moving water into tiny indoor streams. Oddly we discovered a room with the local kami (spirit gods?) costume for the local summer festival held every three years. We enjoyed the town, only a two hour drive south, so much we intend to attend the festival in OCT 2012.
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Mushroom Mania
Okay, so maybe it seems like I'm a little bit obsessed with Japanese snacks, especially ones that come in lots of varieties and flavors. That’s probably because I am. In fact, I’m beyond obsessed!! You would have thought that after a year of living in this country I would have gotten sick of the novelty, but in fact, the novelty has only grown. I become more and more excited when I find a new variety of something. I think I have a problem.
So....chocolate mushrooms. I did an original post of the chocolate mushrooms when we first moved here. I was beyond excited!
But since then, I have found many varieties of chocolate mushrooms to share with you!
I’m sure there will be many more mushrooms to share in the future. Stay tuned and enjoy my Japanese snack problem.
So....chocolate mushrooms. I did an original post of the chocolate mushrooms when we first moved here. I was beyond excited!
But since then, I have found many varieties of chocolate mushrooms to share with you!
- Strawberry Mushrooms
- Cappuccino Mushrooms
- Green Tea Mushrooms
- Apple Mushrooms
- Orange Mushrooms
- I have no idea what this is….maybe green tea flavored something and sweet beans?? Mushrooms
I’m sure there will be many more mushrooms to share in the future. Stay tuned and enjoy my Japanese snack problem.
Monday, June 20, 2011
Thank God for Japan East Railway Company!
March 11, 2011 will be another tragic day Angela and I will never forget. I started the day on Misawa Air Base, in Aamori Prefecture (Northern Japan) finishing up two weeks of temporary duty. There were multiple meetings Friday morning that ran late, and I was rushing to check out of the hotel and get to the train station. I had to get on a morning shinkansen to get back to the Tokyo area in time for a surprise party. Rushing I caught a taxi to the rural train station to begin my journey, running late and missing my intended bullet train out of Hachinoe. I did manage to buy some local candy, including the regional cherry kit-kats for Angela, and some water before my train actually left. I bought a reserved seat, sat next to an elder lady, and promptly went to sleep as we sped up to 300mph speeds.
Dozing, I sensed we had hit some turbulence… then I woke up wide awake realizing I was NOT on an airplane. The lady next to me hit me a few times speaking excitedly in Japanese and shaking her hand, the shinkansen immediately jerked to a stop and the earth kept shaking. Realizing it was an earthquake I settled into my seat and waited for it to stop and then resume to the journey, thinking it was only another earthquake (we had several minor ones the week before). Except I noticed that we had halted on a bridge (Shinkansen’s automatically stop in the event of a seismic occurrence) which made me uneasy and also the duration of the earthquake was long. On a train that moves, the shaking did not seem that abnormal but I know everyone on land felt it much worse. The shaking stopped and we sat on the tracks for a few minutes. Pulling out my iPhone I texted Angela and checked the news and twitter, seeing there were multiple tsunami warnings issued. Again I was not too concerned, as everytime there is an earthquake off the coast here a warning is issued. Several minutes passed then the cell phone lines stopped working and the train lost power. Other passengers who had decent cell phone service (read: anyone other than SOFTBANK) started watching cell phone videos and got very excited… I realized later they were watching live NHK feed of the 13meter tsunami washing away countless coastal towns. I spent some time trying to understand what was happening, but failed and tried to contact Angela, but the phones weren’t really working too well and my battery was being drained. Then several aftershocks started rocking the train, and it began to dawn on me that this was not an average earthquake.
Several hours passed and we sat, cold, on the bridge. Most people were in business clothes heading to Tokyo for a weekend or home, and had promptly taken naps. Eventually someone from the train came into each car and made some announcements, but I don’t know what they said. Needing to talk to someone in English I went to another train car to find two Air Force guys on leave I had talked to earlier. They were sleeping but unconcerned.
As it became later in the day I realized we weren’t going anywhere. There were no lights to be seen on the horizon, meaning the local area had lost power. I sent Angela a text, saying I was turning the phone off to conserve power, then tried to sleep. It started snowing, and eventually we were handed blankets and “hot hands” pads in the dark. Though I thought the hot pads were squid skin, which is sold everywhere in Japan, and while I has hungry, I was not at THAT point yet. My dinner consisted of several packets of cherry kit kats and the rest of my tiny bottle of water.
I quickly developed a hunger headache that continued to worsen as the situation deteriorated. It was a cold, uncomfortable night.
In the morning several announcements were made, and I gathered we were going to be evacuated off of the train, and bussed somewhere. Though I didn’t know where we were going, I followed along. We got off on the tracks on the bridge, and walked what seemed a mile, then down a path to waiting busses. Everyone was calm and helpful. Onboard the busses were breakfast snacks and bottled water. Driving through rural towns I noticed long, orderly lines outside gas stations and food stores, but the stores were not open. There was no power I realized as no traffic lights were working.
We arrived at a large city, without power, and were dropped off. I used the last of my cell phone battery to figure out where I was on google maps and to let Angela know I was ok. Realizing I was in Morioka, north of Sendai but not reasonably far from Hachinoe, I started figuring out how to get back to Misawa, and at least be apart of my command. It didn’t take me long to find out the trains were not running, and the busses didn’t have enough gas. Taxi fares were out of the question, so I followed the line of people to the emergency shelter (Morioka City Theater Hall). There I joined hundreds of other stranded travelers with locals (who I found out later had lost their homes to the tsunami) in the main auditorium. While there was no power someone had plugged in a battery to a radio and it was blaring with news updates. I of course had no idea what was being said. I made up my mind to concentrate more on learning conversational Japanese in the future. As my headache was pounding, I left the theater looking for a convenience store. Across the street was a Lawson’s (like a 7-11), and I went and got in a long line out the door. With no power people were paying in cash. As I snaked through the line I realized people were buying literally everything there. All medicines were already sold out, as well as iPhone mobile battery rechargers, so I grabbed a few rice snacks, juice, canned coffee, and beer. They had already sold out of water. Looking back on it I am still amazed how orderly the ransacking of the store had been in an emergency situation, and everyone paid for their items! In America I know someone would have broken into the store and stolen whatever they wanted in such a situation… different cultures.
Wandering back to the theater I noticed large maps that looked familiar. After spending some time in New Orleans after Katrina I recognized the maps as displaying city districts that had been flooded. While Morioka is inland, it is along a river that the tsunami had crept up and must have washed out some homes and/or a dam broke. The locals who were now homeless had segregated themselves inside the theater to aisles with large, cheap tatami mats marking their territory. They were obviously exhausted and much quieter than all the travelers trapped there. The locals had set up a table offering water, fruit, and cake to us. I enjoyed several slices of cake and water then went to sit down. My headache got worse and worse. Then my stomach got upset.
After taking a nap I realized the water we were given might not have been safe to drink. So I spent the next hour in a pitch black bathroom (no lights) vomiting. Between the bad water and my subsistence on sugar products no wonder my stomach was so mad at me. I didn’t even drink my beer, I felt awful. Sometime in this period of time power was reconnected to the City Theater. I started charging my phone at an empty outlet (they were all immediately swamped). Letting Angela know I was still ok she did a quick translation for headache medicine that I displayed on my iPhone and took it to the desk handing out food. They read it and handed me a strange powder that I couldn’t read… so I did the responsible thing and downed the powder. Finding all the vending machines powered I used some yen change and got three bottles of water so I knew it was safe. Feeling a little better I checked on my charging phone. A great thing about Japan is I could leave my iPhone plugged in and walk away knowing no one would steal it.
The phone lines weren’t working but data network was, so I was finally able to talk to Angela on Skype. That was when I found out how destructive the tsunami had been and for the first time heard about problems at a nuclear power plant. Angela was glad to hear from me, and told me about the issues my command had trying to figure out where I was.
A JR Lines East representative gathered all the travelers into the foyer and made a large announcement. I was talking to the Air Force guys who had discovered a local who knew some English, so we asked him what was said. To get us home, JR Lines had set up busses to Sendai if that was your original destination, or for those headed to Tokyo we were presented with an elaborate plan. With the trains on the east coast not running (due to a lack of power and the emerging threat from the Fukushima Nuclear plant meltdown) JR would bus us across Japan to the west coast, then take local trains south along the Sea of Japan to Niigata where we could pick up a Shinkansen into Tokyo’s western end. Having no other options we prepared to leave at 5am the next day. I tried to sleep, but was still not feeling too well and had a hard time sleeping on the floor. Over the evening TVs were turned on to the news and I saw for the first time the devastation from the tsunami, and the growing concern over the nuclear plant.
The three Americans apparently overslept as we were up early only to find every Japanese traveler in line hours before we boarded busses. We waited in line and got on our bus eventually, given bottles of brown tea and a bento box. Then we headed west, away from the damaged coast and radiation and into the mountains. The roads we traveled on were amazing as we cut through the passes with snow drifts 20feet high, the road literally a tunnel. There were few cars on the roads until we made it Akita and turned south along the Sea of Japan. Life was surreal as suddenly there was electricity, motion, life again. We disembarked the busses and got packed on a rickety train, standing room only, south for hours until we reached Niigata. JR lines handed us what I named the “golden” ticket, a slip of paper with kanji on it that gave us a free pass onto virtually any train. From Niigata we boarded a bullet train and road into Tokyo station, still fairly oblivious of the damage done. I was even lucky to grab local lines all the way to our local station, not knowing about the rolling electrical blackouts that had halted most train traffic. Angela and AJ picked me up and my surreal four hour bullet train journey from Misawa that turned into three days was over. Only home did I realize the enormity of the disaster but was anxious and proud to get back to work to provide whatever aid we could to the stoic and brave people of Japan.
Dozing, I sensed we had hit some turbulence… then I woke up wide awake realizing I was NOT on an airplane. The lady next to me hit me a few times speaking excitedly in Japanese and shaking her hand, the shinkansen immediately jerked to a stop and the earth kept shaking. Realizing it was an earthquake I settled into my seat and waited for it to stop and then resume to the journey, thinking it was only another earthquake (we had several minor ones the week before). Except I noticed that we had halted on a bridge (Shinkansen’s automatically stop in the event of a seismic occurrence) which made me uneasy and also the duration of the earthquake was long. On a train that moves, the shaking did not seem that abnormal but I know everyone on land felt it much worse. The shaking stopped and we sat on the tracks for a few minutes. Pulling out my iPhone I texted Angela and checked the news and twitter, seeing there were multiple tsunami warnings issued. Again I was not too concerned, as everytime there is an earthquake off the coast here a warning is issued. Several minutes passed then the cell phone lines stopped working and the train lost power. Other passengers who had decent cell phone service (read: anyone other than SOFTBANK) started watching cell phone videos and got very excited… I realized later they were watching live NHK feed of the 13meter tsunami washing away countless coastal towns. I spent some time trying to understand what was happening, but failed and tried to contact Angela, but the phones weren’t really working too well and my battery was being drained. Then several aftershocks started rocking the train, and it began to dawn on me that this was not an average earthquake.
Several hours passed and we sat, cold, on the bridge. Most people were in business clothes heading to Tokyo for a weekend or home, and had promptly taken naps. Eventually someone from the train came into each car and made some announcements, but I don’t know what they said. Needing to talk to someone in English I went to another train car to find two Air Force guys on leave I had talked to earlier. They were sleeping but unconcerned.
As it became later in the day I realized we weren’t going anywhere. There were no lights to be seen on the horizon, meaning the local area had lost power. I sent Angela a text, saying I was turning the phone off to conserve power, then tried to sleep. It started snowing, and eventually we were handed blankets and “hot hands” pads in the dark. Though I thought the hot pads were squid skin, which is sold everywhere in Japan, and while I has hungry, I was not at THAT point yet. My dinner consisted of several packets of cherry kit kats and the rest of my tiny bottle of water.
I quickly developed a hunger headache that continued to worsen as the situation deteriorated. It was a cold, uncomfortable night.
In the morning several announcements were made, and I gathered we were going to be evacuated off of the train, and bussed somewhere. Though I didn’t know where we were going, I followed along. We got off on the tracks on the bridge, and walked what seemed a mile, then down a path to waiting busses. Everyone was calm and helpful. Onboard the busses were breakfast snacks and bottled water. Driving through rural towns I noticed long, orderly lines outside gas stations and food stores, but the stores were not open. There was no power I realized as no traffic lights were working.
We arrived at a large city, without power, and were dropped off. I used the last of my cell phone battery to figure out where I was on google maps and to let Angela know I was ok. Realizing I was in Morioka, north of Sendai but not reasonably far from Hachinoe, I started figuring out how to get back to Misawa, and at least be apart of my command. It didn’t take me long to find out the trains were not running, and the busses didn’t have enough gas. Taxi fares were out of the question, so I followed the line of people to the emergency shelter (Morioka City Theater Hall). There I joined hundreds of other stranded travelers with locals (who I found out later had lost their homes to the tsunami) in the main auditorium. While there was no power someone had plugged in a battery to a radio and it was blaring with news updates. I of course had no idea what was being said. I made up my mind to concentrate more on learning conversational Japanese in the future. As my headache was pounding, I left the theater looking for a convenience store. Across the street was a Lawson’s (like a 7-11), and I went and got in a long line out the door. With no power people were paying in cash. As I snaked through the line I realized people were buying literally everything there. All medicines were already sold out, as well as iPhone mobile battery rechargers, so I grabbed a few rice snacks, juice, canned coffee, and beer. They had already sold out of water. Looking back on it I am still amazed how orderly the ransacking of the store had been in an emergency situation, and everyone paid for their items! In America I know someone would have broken into the store and stolen whatever they wanted in such a situation… different cultures.
Wandering back to the theater I noticed large maps that looked familiar. After spending some time in New Orleans after Katrina I recognized the maps as displaying city districts that had been flooded. While Morioka is inland, it is along a river that the tsunami had crept up and must have washed out some homes and/or a dam broke. The locals who were now homeless had segregated themselves inside the theater to aisles with large, cheap tatami mats marking their territory. They were obviously exhausted and much quieter than all the travelers trapped there. The locals had set up a table offering water, fruit, and cake to us. I enjoyed several slices of cake and water then went to sit down. My headache got worse and worse. Then my stomach got upset.
After taking a nap I realized the water we were given might not have been safe to drink. So I spent the next hour in a pitch black bathroom (no lights) vomiting. Between the bad water and my subsistence on sugar products no wonder my stomach was so mad at me. I didn’t even drink my beer, I felt awful. Sometime in this period of time power was reconnected to the City Theater. I started charging my phone at an empty outlet (they were all immediately swamped). Letting Angela know I was still ok she did a quick translation for headache medicine that I displayed on my iPhone and took it to the desk handing out food. They read it and handed me a strange powder that I couldn’t read… so I did the responsible thing and downed the powder. Finding all the vending machines powered I used some yen change and got three bottles of water so I knew it was safe. Feeling a little better I checked on my charging phone. A great thing about Japan is I could leave my iPhone plugged in and walk away knowing no one would steal it.
The phone lines weren’t working but data network was, so I was finally able to talk to Angela on Skype. That was when I found out how destructive the tsunami had been and for the first time heard about problems at a nuclear power plant. Angela was glad to hear from me, and told me about the issues my command had trying to figure out where I was.
A JR Lines East representative gathered all the travelers into the foyer and made a large announcement. I was talking to the Air Force guys who had discovered a local who knew some English, so we asked him what was said. To get us home, JR Lines had set up busses to Sendai if that was your original destination, or for those headed to Tokyo we were presented with an elaborate plan. With the trains on the east coast not running (due to a lack of power and the emerging threat from the Fukushima Nuclear plant meltdown) JR would bus us across Japan to the west coast, then take local trains south along the Sea of Japan to Niigata where we could pick up a Shinkansen into Tokyo’s western end. Having no other options we prepared to leave at 5am the next day. I tried to sleep, but was still not feeling too well and had a hard time sleeping on the floor. Over the evening TVs were turned on to the news and I saw for the first time the devastation from the tsunami, and the growing concern over the nuclear plant.
The three Americans apparently overslept as we were up early only to find every Japanese traveler in line hours before we boarded busses. We waited in line and got on our bus eventually, given bottles of brown tea and a bento box. Then we headed west, away from the damaged coast and radiation and into the mountains. The roads we traveled on were amazing as we cut through the passes with snow drifts 20feet high, the road literally a tunnel. There were few cars on the roads until we made it Akita and turned south along the Sea of Japan. Life was surreal as suddenly there was electricity, motion, life again. We disembarked the busses and got packed on a rickety train, standing room only, south for hours until we reached Niigata. JR lines handed us what I named the “golden” ticket, a slip of paper with kanji on it that gave us a free pass onto virtually any train. From Niigata we boarded a bullet train and road into Tokyo station, still fairly oblivious of the damage done. I was even lucky to grab local lines all the way to our local station, not knowing about the rolling electrical blackouts that had halted most train traffic. Angela and AJ picked me up and my surreal four hour bullet train journey from Misawa that turned into three days was over. Only home did I realize the enormity of the disaster but was anxious and proud to get back to work to provide whatever aid we could to the stoic and brave people of Japan.
Sunday, June 19, 2011
A new favorite
I've really come to love Ramen since living in Japan. And not instant ramen, but awesome, homemade, served in a huge ceramic bowl ramen. I prefer miso based broth, but James often gets a soy based, spicy broth. The ramen at Japanese noodle shops is very filling, with thick broth, heavy noodles, vegetables, meat, and sometimes eggs.
I crave ramen on cold, rainy days, and with it being the rainy season, I'm craving it quite often. We have a ramen shop down the road that I enjoy, but my new favorite is about 20 or 30 minutes away. We probably pass at least 20 ramen shops to get there (and this is a low estimate, trust me) but this ramen is well worth the travel. Upon entering the ramen shop, you are greeted with a deep bow, and met with an electronic ordering machine. You insert your money, choose your dinner, and out comes a ticket with your order, which you then give to the wait staff. I love the ambiance of this particular shop, and I love the food even more.
I crave ramen on cold, rainy days, and with it being the rainy season, I'm craving it quite often. We have a ramen shop down the road that I enjoy, but my new favorite is about 20 or 30 minutes away. We probably pass at least 20 ramen shops to get there (and this is a low estimate, trust me) but this ramen is well worth the travel. Upon entering the ramen shop, you are greeted with a deep bow, and met with an electronic ordering machine. You insert your money, choose your dinner, and out comes a ticket with your order, which you then give to the wait staff. I love the ambiance of this particular shop, and I love the food even more.
30 Day Blogging Challenge
That's right folks! The 30 Day Blogging Challenge. As many of you have noticed, James and I have been extremely slacking on the blog over the last year. It's not that we want to be slackers, but we've lost a little bit of motivation in keeping the blog updated, so we are challenging ourselves with the 30 day Blogging Challenge. We are committing to blogging every day for the next 30 days, so hopefully we will keep it up! Get ready for an exciting 30 days of life updates! I may or may not count this blog, so it might actually be 29 days. ;) Depends on what's happening in our lives in 30 days. And on a final note, please don't be confused by the strange order of serious blogs and fun quirky things in Japan...we are just trying to get the blog up and going again. And besides, the strange order is actually much closer to how my brain functions, so enjoy!
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