Sunday, June 28, 2015

Inside Out Stamp Rally!; Tokyo Metro

Stamp rally time!  What's a stamp rally?  Well, I never heard of one before coming to Japan.  A stamp rally is an event where you go to different designated places to have a card stamped.  Once you get all of the required stamps, you get a prize.  The Tokyo Metro subway system just had a stamp rally for the movie Inside Out.  We traveled to five different stations to stamp our cards.  Once we got all five stamps, we sent them in the mail to the address listed on the card.  Completed cards equal entries into a contest where we can win various Inside Out prizes like free movie tickets.  To be honest, the odds of winning are terrible for this particular rally.  I highly doubt we'll win anything.  However, I'll keep you updated if my guess is incorrect.

Like most movies in Japan, the release date for Inside Out trails the worldwide release.  We'll get the movie on July 17, 2015, more than a month after the U.S.  Can't wait.  Unfortunately, the stamp rally ends on June 30, 2015.  So if you want a chance to win, you better get started quickly.  Each Tokyo Metro station has the cards for you to start the rally.  If you don't participate, great.  Better chances for us even as slim as they are.

Anyhoo, here are some pictures of the stamp rally. 

We found Sadness at Kudanshita on the Tozai line.
Pre-stamped Sadness.
Got the stamp!
We found Fear at Minami Aoyama on the Hanzomon line.
Got Fear!
Anger was found at Shinjuku San-Chome station.  I can't remember which line it was but I think it was the Marunouchi line. I was pretty grumpy because I was hungry when we found Anger, so he was pretty appropriate for me. 
Got Anger!
We found Joy at Nihonbashi station.  I'm not sure which line it was.
We got Disgust at Shin Ochanomizu station on the Chiyoda line.
Here's Disgust!
Well, that's it for now.  Thanks for the read and have a good rest of the weekend!

Thursday, June 25, 2015

胡同麺家 だん亭 (Dan-Tei), Myoden, Ichikawa;

We decided to go local a few weekends ago and had dinner at  Dan-Tei last night, which is probably our favorite Chinese restaurant in Japan.  The food is great and the restaurant is only 2 minutes from our apartment.  You can't beat that.  The cooks are really Chinese here and no Japanese is spoken in the kitchen.  Having Chinese cooks doesn't ensure good food though.  As much as I love Ma Ma and Yeh Yeh, I did not love their food growing up.  Anyhoo, not only is the food great, you get large portions too.  Dan-Tei was an izakaya (Japanese pub) at one point and the dark wood paneling and tables, decorative stones as well as the floor seating still remain.  Whenever overseas people visit us, we always bring them to Dan-Tei.  Accordingly, Ryan, Mom, Uncle Jim and Auntie Lil all have had the chance to experience Ichikawa city fine Chinese dining.

Japanese Chinese food is a bit different than its American and Canadian counterpart.  This is largely due to the fact that unlike the U.S. and Canada, most of the Chinese in Japan are Mandarin.  The Chinese in North America are largely Cantonese, especially in the many Chinatowns (although this demographic is rapidly changing).    It was Cantonese labor that helped build the railroads in the late 1800's after all.  That said, Cantonese food differs from Mandarin food.  Cantonese food is heavier with darker sauces it seems.    Growing up in a Cantonese-American family, I became accustomed to shrimp with dark lobster sauce, dark gravy egg foo yung, brown fried rice, crunchy lo-mein noodles and brown chow-fun noodles.   Well I can't find these items in Japan.  The Chinese food here is really light and tends to be more spicy with a  Szechuan influence.  When we want to get the Chinese food I am accustomed too, I usually joke that we need to hop on a flight to Hong Kong.

Dan-Tei serves traditionally Japanese Chinese food but I love it anyway.   Unlike when family members are here, we went pretty light this meal, only ordering a few items.  We ordered Cantonese-style sweet and sour pork (by chance, they cater to my preference!), shrimp with chili sauce, chin jya ros (similar to moo shu pork) for our entrees and fried sesame balls for dessert.

The Cantonese-style sweet and sour pork is my favorite item on the menu.  The pork is very lightly breaded and has the sweeter heavy orange sweet and sour sauce I love.  You get four or five large chunks of pork.  There's no pineapple here, instead they add sweet Japanese potatoes.  Onion wedges and green peppers nicely blend with the sauce.   There is a black vinegar sweet and sour pork on the menu too, which is a more traditional Japanese Chinese dish.

I never had shrimp with chili sauce until I came to Japan.  It's a Japanese Chinese essential at Chinese restaurants here in Japan.  What exactly is shrimp with chili sauce?  Well, it's a wonderful concoction of shrimp, onions and sweet & spicy orange chili sauce.  Dan-Tei does it well.  Usually the shrimp are smaller in Japanese Chinese menu items than those in the U.S. or Canada.  The Dan-Tei shrimp are bit larger than most of the Chinese restaurants here and are perfectly cooked.  They have that crisp snap when you bite into them.

Wifey got the chin gya ros  (neither of us can actually remember the name, we think it was something like this).  It was very similar to mushu pork sans the plum sauce.  We got an abundant amount of cooked strips of pork marinated in a sweet sauce.  Sliced onions and cucumber strips rounded out this one.  The wraps were cooked and a little more like tortillas than the wraps in mushu pork.

We ordered the large rice.  It really was pretty large.
Finally, the daughters ordered fried sesame balls to complete our dinner.  Yummy!
Everything here is delicious and this dinner was no different.  I give Dan-Tei five gyozas out of five gyozas.  Not only is it extremely convenient for us, the food is abolustely delicious and you get large portions for a restaurant in Japan.  If you have a chance to go out to Myoden on the Tozai line, be sure to eat at Dan-Tei!


Sunday, May 31, 2015

Escape from Tokyo: Karuizawa


We had the chance to get out to the woods over the weekend by heading to Karuizawa for a wedding.  Karuizawa is an hour and twenty-minute bullet train ride from Tokyo.  This place is beautiful, set with a mountain backdrop and surrounded by forests.  To be honest, I've been here at least three times for my law firm's annual firm trip and not had the greatest times.  Of course, on those trips, lots of drinking the night with colleagues ends up with hung-over mornings where I try to escape on an early bullet train back to Tokyo.   Being here with the family is a bit different and much more fun.  Here are some selected pictures from our time out there over the weekend.
We took the 9:10 Asama bullet train out from Ueno.
All aboard!!!
Nothing wrong about starting at 9:30am...
Welcome to Karuizawa.
Wedding cake anyone?
Master chef preparing our fancy wedding meal.
Our beautiful salad.
Foie gras.
Cream of cabbage soup.
Fish.
Wagyu beef.
A delicious dessert.
That was the wedding.  You need a car to get around where we stayed.  It was about 35 minutes from Karuizawa station.  Let's get some shots of our lodging.
Almost there...
Our second-floor cabin.
A little friend I rescued from the cabin.
Driving to the cabin and staying there reminded me of a childhood trip to Holland, Michigan with our family friends, the Murdoch's.  The cabin we went to in Karuizawa was much newer though.

We stayed at one cabin and rented another for a BBQ.
Full-sized gas grill... Oh yeah!!!
Watch out for bears!
No bears here...
Or here...
Wonderful little breakfast place.
Best pizza toast I've ever had.
I love Karuizawa!!!
 That's it for now guys.  Have a good weekend!

Sunday, May 24, 2015

Star Wars Visions Exhibition/Gallery; Roppongi Hills; Disney Choco Eggs; Tokyo

We finally made it to the Star Wars Exhibition/Gallery that I talked about here.  I got really lucky on this one.  By chance, people who work at Roppongi Hills got free admission to the Star Wars Exhibition/Gallery on the top of the building, the 52nd Floor.  This special was only for a period of 4 consecutive days and ended today.  We could bring guests too, so I brought my family with me.  Usual admission to the gallery is 1800 yen (15 dollars) for adults and slightly less for kids.  We saved about 60 bucks with this special.  I went on Friday night too with a coworker on my team, being the Star Wars geek that I am.

Unfortunately, no pictures were allowed in the gallery.  They strongly enforced this rule and would approach anyone they suspected of taking a picture.  I was able to snap a few shots in the area before entering the actual gallery.  Here are some shots from the area where we were allowed to take pictures. 

Lord Vader himself.
Close up of Darth Vader.
More Vader.
Lots of stormtroopers.
The kids asked me what the Death Star was when they saw this above their heads.
Those pictures were from Friday night.  Here are the ones from today.  We went up top to the Sky Deck.  Make sure to take a picture fighting the life-sized Darth Vader (you can hold a light saber) if you go up to the Sky Deck.  We got one, but wifey would kill me if I posted it here.  Got this nice shot of Tokyo from the top of my building.
Here's what Mothra destroyed in Godzilla vs. the Thing, the Tokyo Tower.
Important reminder before entering the gallery.  Strangely, it was in slightly incorrect English.  You would think LFL would have approval rights over signs.
As stated earlier, we couldn't take pictures.  If we could, I'd post a million here.  In sum, if you are a Star Wars fan, you must visit the Star Wars Visions Exhibition.  It's until the end of June.  Inside the gallery there was a museum of Star Wars props and costumes including light sabers, blasters, Ewoks, droids and Jawas.  They had actual costumes from all six movies.  The gallery also had new Star Wars artwork specially created for the exhibition, even a nude Aayla Secura painting which I ashamedly thought was hot.  They also had models from various battles in the films, a mini showdown between Darth Maul, Obi-Wan and Qui Gon Jin and a 1/4 scale Jabba the Hutt.  There were T.V. screens throughout the gallery showcasing great scenes from the movies.  Finally there was a large souvenir shop which we had to wait 20 minutes to get in.  After visiting the exhibition, I can't wait to see Episode 7 in December.  Even my little one wants to watch all of the movies now.

They added a Baymax stormtrooper helmet to the stormtrooper showcase on the first floor.  Here it is:
In other news, we got a few Disney Choco Eggs last night.  They are identical to Kinder Eggs.  Even the chocolate is the same.  This series is the best of all time though.  The only sucky figure in this series is Ursula.  So that's only like a 1 in 12 chance of being disappointed.  Here are some pictures of the eggs below.
You can find these at all convenience and grocery stores in Tokyo it seems.  They are about 200 yen or 2 bucks each.

Here's the egg.
The same waxy chocolate I remember from our Kinder Egg expeditions to Canada as a kid.
Tsum Tsum Mickey!!! Yeah!!!
Four winners out of four eggs: Tsum Tsum Minnie, Elsa, Hiro and Tsum Tsum Mickey.
Well that's it guys.  Have a good Sunday.  Make it out to the Star Wars Visions Exhibition and buy some Disney Choco Eggs if you can!