Monday, April 6, 2015

ramen and long lines for food & alcohol (a summary of my mother's trip to japan)

As the title suggests, last month my mother came to visit me in Japan! She stopped by for almost a week on her way back from a college reunion, in which we spent hours waiting in lines for food/alcohol and probably ate more ramen than I usually eat in six months, haha. <3

She came in on Thursday evening but still offered to cook us dinner (so of course I accepted, haha), and on Friday, we got up early-ish to head to the Tsukiji Fish Market! I'd never been and thought maybe she would like it, and it seems like she did! After wandering around and trying not to get in the way amongst giant crabs and tuna heads and all sorts of other marine delicacies, she insisted that we find the longest line to stand and wait in for lunch, with the logic that longest line = most delicious (even though I warned her that sometimes in Japan people just get in lines without knowing what they're for). Luckily, the logic was sound this time and the lunch we had was absolutely delicious!

Next we headed over to Yokohama, to wander by the Red Brick Warehouse and the pier, which are pretty much the only places I ever go in Yokohama but I always enjoy it anyway because it's so pretty. On the pier we saw what we thought was one lone tree blooming with sakura, but when we approached and tried to take pictures it turns out it was fake and they were shooting some sort of drama around it (no pictures allowed). I wonder who it was... Anyway, after that we went to our actual destination, the Yokohama Ramen Museum! (Not to be confused with the Cup Noodle Museum.) Because I know my mom loves ramen, and basically all there is to do there is eat ramen (it's more ramen shop than actual museum). But it was also decorated in this great Showa-style way (we came in through a part that was decorated like a bathhouse and I thought we were lost), which was a nice atmosphere. And they have smaller bowls of ramen so you can taste a few if you want (though we only had one little bowl each).

The next morning we got up bright and early to take the shinkansen to Niigata! My friend who lives there was performing in a musical, on a weekend that also had a huge sake festival, and since I wanted to go I essentially just dragged my mom along with me, haha. So we boarded my first ever two-story shinkansen (!) and wandered around a little after dropping of our luggage. Then we headed to the sake festival, but upon seeing the line (which we could see from across the bridge) we decided to go have lunch (ramen again) for sustenance first. And then we waited in line for over an hour before entering the craziness that was Niigata's Sake no Jin! Tickets were 2000 yen and with it we each got a little sake cup, with which we could then taste as many types of sake we wanted, in a giant room full of sake brewers. We decided to try drinking every sake that had 雪 in its name (since it's in my name), and then some. We also ended up meeting with the friend I came to see, a friend who's sake lover group was selling their original sake (Connect! Which my mother decided was the best she had tasted and came back to buy later), two National AJET friends, and another friend who I volunteered in Okinawa with two years ago. :D And then we had dinner with my friend and some of his friends, before going back to our hotel early and just going to bed.

Day 2 in Niigata was spent wandering around for a bit and having a seafood lunch before video chatting with my dad for a few minutes before seeing my friend's musical, The Frog Prince, by Niigata AJET. It was an original musical (apparently written by the cast of last year's musical) about a princess who wanted to be a pop star and a prince who thought he was a frog, and it was really entertaining! I was very impressed by the guy playing the prince, who had to hop around stage for like two hours. After the musical we visited a nearby temple and then took a walk/train ride to wait in line for another hour or so for the ramen place where my friend said he had the best ramen ever. Yes, ramen again, but I'd say it was worth it! Apparently on weekends they do thick noodles and on weekdays thin ones, so I'm glad we went on a weekend because thick noodles are my favorite and it was really delicious!

Our final day in the prefecture was spent visiting Yahiko Shrine, a little shrine way up top of a mountain, which we took a cable car up to. After admiring the nature and buying some sweets, we headed to Tsubame to catch the shinkansen, but not before spending an hour or so shopping at an industrial goods center (apparently what the place is famous for). My mom finally bought a Japanese knife, and we had a very tasty semi-fancy lunch made of local ingredients before finally taking the shinkansen and train back to Chiba.

On Tuesday I went back to work and my mom spent the day packing and making me lots of delicious food, for both lunch and dinner and to freeze for the future. <3 And then on Wednesday it was time for her to go back to the US! She wanted to try Japanese tea ceremony so we dragged her giant suitcase (no big lockers available at the station) all the way to the Japanese garden in Makuhari, but the teahouse was being rented out for the day so no tea for us. :( After that we just went to the airport and had ramen one final time and did some shopping before it was time for her to leave.

And then she left. Sigh. But it was a great trip and I was really happy to spend almost a week together! Hoping she and the rest of my family will make it back here at least one more time before I leave. :)