This is my adorable great-uncle, who owns a popular beachside cafe called Tsuboya (and his cat, who only likes him). You should visit if you are ever in Shimoda; it is charming. |
Soba with a fried shrimp topping. It was shockingly delicious. |
Izu has tons of natural hot springs, which means they have a lot of free footbaths in parks. |
My uncle treated my brother and me to a night at a fancypants hotel. The hotel gives you jammies, which everyone wanders around in all day, including to dinner at the hotel restaurant. |
Speaking of dinner, it was endless. Let's count the dishes, shall we? Okay, here's 1. Appetizers. |
2. Shabu shabu. |
Yum, drinks! There are lots of oranges grown in this region, so I got the juice cocktail. |
3. Sashimi. |
4. Teriyaki fish steak. What kind of fish? I don't remember. There's probably not an English name for it anyway. |
5. Taro root manju. |
6. Beef stew. (At this point, my stomach was starting to seriously hurt.) |
7. Seafood chawanmushi. I couldn't even eat this because I was too full. |
8. Pickles. |
9. Dessert! Thank God, we made it! |
Speaking of Japanese dairy products, their soft serve is ridiculously good. American soft serve tastes like garbage in comparison. |
This is the owner of Malukoh, an old-school cafe where he's been serving soft serve and hotcakes for 40 years. We love him. |
At Kura, a tiny place where housewives cook meals out of local ingredients from the area farms. |
This was 500 yen. (Less than 5 bucks.) |
If you go to Japan, get the menchi, katsu, and croquettes from a local butcher. They fry everything in lard. |
Everyone says Japan is expensive, but dude, these skewers are CHEAP. The chicken is only 50 cents a pop. |
Japanese spiny lobster in butter sauce with salmon roe over pasta. Everything perfectly cooked and seasoned. |
The foam on this beer is frozen like a slushy! |
An awesome street of tiny bars in Oimachi. |
Tsukemen. Oh, this pork -- it melted in your mouth. |
Fantastic pics - it all makes Convoy seem so drab!
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