Thursday, October 25, 2018

October 26, 2018 + Photos

October 26, 2018
It's been a week...and I am pretty tired. Still, I have needed to update my photos, so here we are. Three sections. Scenerey, pictures of me, it doesn't happen often, and finally, the food. Enjoy.
I love the ocean and ocean we got a plenty as we rode the train towards Hakodate







Add this one to my collection of weird hazard barrier markers
Welcome to the Hakodate public hall. It gets bigger.

See, I told you. Gilded and beautiful.

The city...the city is beautiful.

Churches in Hakodate? Sure, why not?

I am not very photogenic, but enjoy.

Goryokaku with my friend.

Eating at the morning market.

Daimon Yokocho, the stall village.

Waiting on a train.

Disheveled and tired on the cruise.

Me and my friend at the Onuma park.

Last one of me, welcome to food. This is the best burger joint in the world.

Sushi on the way back home.

Morning breakfast for a friend of mine.

Tempura of an incredible variety.

Special Hakodate salty ramen

The squid ink Gyoza and the KING gyoza, most delicious in the world!

Special Chasu Ramen, with delicious pork and a boiled egg.

Cooking Yakiniku. I'll leave the actual body parts to the imagination.

Uncooked Yakiniku
And there we have it. Now, I'm gonna go sleep. It's early. Hope you enjoyed.

Sunday, October 14, 2018

October 14, 2018


 October 14, 2018
What to say?  Well, how about I just got back from vacation again? Seems like a lot, huh? It’s felt like time has gone by so fast, from my vacation in summer to this fall trip. Anyway, details now, photos later, you know the drill.
My vacation started with an old friend of mine arriving in Japan. We had yakiniku together on Saturday night, with her favorite food there being the Karibi, or the fatty pieces of meat. It was a good time, but I…didn’t get much sleep. I truthfully haven’t been sleeping much the last few weeks. It’s not because I’m worried or stressed or anything, I just…haven’t. I’m getting more now and I’ll talk a bit about life after the vacation, but anyway, on with our story.
Yakiniku and ramen are standard stops for visitors because I want to show my friends the best food of Japan and I want to show the friends I’ve made at those restaurants my stateside friends. We had ramen on Sunday on our way to the cruise. Hokkaido, specifically, Hakodate, was the destination. We got to the cruise a bit early and my friend did some wandering as I rested, again, from lack of sleep. This is kind of a theme of our trip, as we do lots of stuff together, but she just loves exploring. For a 65-year-old lady, I couldn’t keep up with her, haha. She found everything in the journey very exciting, which made me feel good about our choices of visitations. I sprang for a room on the cruise ship and it was a much more enjoyable time with company. A relaxing cruise from Sendai to Tomakomai. I repeated a lot of where I went from last year, but we had a few new twists as well.
Our arrival in Tomakomai was fine, but we were waiting on trains all bloody day on Monday. The hokuto super express is a cool train, but it was late perpetually during my stay in Hokkaido, which was a major disappointment. Upon our arrival at the hotel, I was a little worried about the quality, but it turned out to be a solid place, with good A/C(it’s rarer than you think in Hokkaido) and clean rooms, with enough space for me to relax, which I did. We went to the stall village in Hakodate twice during our stay and had some wondrous foods. In order, they were, squid ink, lamb, and king style gyoza, three kinds, rice bowls full of fresh sea food and I had uni, or sea urchin, for the first time, we had tempura, including hunks of corn which I got a kick out of as it was sweet corn, and we had my favorite, wasabi pork, which really cleans out the sinuses. The vendors even remembered me, which was very touching.
Tuesday, we started out with a morning breakfast at the morning market. We’d do this every morning during our stay and it always proved to have great food at reasonable prices. Then we headed out to Goryokaku, and I wisely sprang for taxis, as I was not about to wear myself out with my more energetic counterpart. It was a fun tour of history and our trip to the tower was a chance to get some very good food and gifts for others. A running motif of our tour was my friend wanting to learn a little Japanese. Pronunciation was a problem for her, but hey, she tried and I taught. Following Goryokaku, we got a delicious meal at a local burger joint called Hot Box. I have to tell you, this is the BEST burger place IN THE WORLD. It’s small, but the owner is friendly and the burgers he cooks are magical. Couple that with the fantastic Hokkaido potatoes used to make the fries and you have a recipe for culinary mastery. Afterwards, we headed to Mt. Hakodate. Again, fate screws me and we couldn’t take the ropeway. We were one day too late. Ugh!  The bus trip was much more tolerable this year, though. Less crowded overall. I maintain the view is worth it. It’s so breathtakingly beautiful that I was smiling all night, especially with their little movie. They have a short movie about the view of Mt. Hakodate which they refer to as a full course viewing. It truly is a full course.  A full course meal for the soul. And, we ended the night with some Mcdonalds. Japanese Mcdonalds, especially in Hokkaido, are magical and they still had the Tsukimi, or moon burger, that I loved from September. Such a good time.
We planned to go to a park on Wednesday, but instead, went on a walking tour of Hakodate, to see the old brick warehouses the foreigners used, then we say the northern peoples’ museum, and we headed to see the old public hall and some churches. Great architecture all around and some wondrous sights to see, just in the local area. Unfortunately, the Hot Box was closed on Wednesday, but my friend and I headed out to a local ramen place and got the legendary Hokkaido special ramen. It’s…okay. I prefer my ramen in Natori better, but the salty flavor the pork is pretty impressive.
Thursday, we spent all day in a park, Onuma Koen. My time was limited last year, but this year, my friend and I went island hopping on a walking tour of the whole park. No pumpkins for Halloween, but it was still a beautiful tour, by land and by sea.  I had a great time there and when we got back to Hakodate, more Hot Box. I’m not exaggerating. Best burgers in the world. I actually went back to the Hot Box, AGAIN, for dinner. Haha, it was a surprising discovery that I was super pleased with.
Friday, was mostly a day for getting home. We rode to Shin-Hakodate, took the Shinkansen, once in Sendai we got sushi, which was great, and I bought a few trinkets to give to friends. Afterwards, we both called it a night. I bought a ton of gifts for people and I am buying more besides, to give my friends a real taste of Japanese sweets. Only two, maybe three care packages this time.
Saturday, I was still tired, but having slept in my own bed helped a great deal. We walked to the bath house, after I reserved a taxi to the airport for my friend’s trip to Korea and China. The bath house was a nice place to relax and I felt a bit light headed by the end. It was a good time, but also a bit somber. We both knew it was goodbye, but I feel we were both a bit tired, so it was okay, we could both rest afterwards. No goodbyes were said, because we know we’ll meet again. After our parting, I spent my days resting and trying to recover my strength to return to work. I’m feeling pretty good as I type this, but first, a few thoughts on the trip, then back to regular life.
Foods to remember. I mentioned the stall village, Hot Box, and ramen, but I also had some delicious sweets, including the white black thunder, the magical crème brulee style cake, and the wondrous butter cookies called Moonlight. I also discovered a variant of black thunder in two different stores. One had a bit more…nutty spices to it?  Almost like brown sugar or a different type of flour, but I couldn’t quite place it. Another was like a poptart full of chocolate, but it felt much healthier, not as sweet, and a perfect balance of sugar and chocolate. Wondrous.
The trip itself ran me a bit ragged, but I didn’t get sick and I didn’t tear up my legs like last year, so that was good. I enjoyed seeing the new sights and revisiting old stomping grounds. If I can’t live in Natori, I would definitely like to live in or close to Hakodate. It’s a beautiful place, but not a mega tourist trap like Tokyo. Hakodate is more open to the strange and bizarre, as many people there were not what might fit your typical idea of a Japanese person and that’s great. I loved seeing the variance there. Finally, the weather when I got home was just perfect. It’s finally cool enough for me to be KING OF WINTER!  When winter arrives, at least, haha.
To round out, let’s review the in-between time from the last post to now. My students have been working hard to try and prepare for the Eiken and most of them, I’m optimistic about their chances. We’ve been working towards the Halloween party as well, with question practice and Halloween related practice. I’m having a grand time living in Natori and have no complaints and my time at work is…well, it is work, but it’s very fun. I’m grateful for saving and sending money stateside, because I had to use my American debit card to reserve a lot of things for my trip to Hokkaido, but that account is running a bit low now, haha, something I need to fix soon. I said before I wasn’t sleeping much, but that’s not quite right. I’m getting a decent amount of sleep and rest, but falling asleep is harder, so sometimes I just lay in bed awake. Still, I am trying to get up early to do my walking, and that might be why I’m tired. Going to bed at like 12:30 or 1, falling asleep at like 3, and then waking up at 8:30 leaves a bit of a deficit, eh? Anyway, I’m taking steps to fix it, now that all the excitement is over. Finally, I’ll just say, I’ve met someone online. I told people I started looking and…well, I don’t have too much news. It’s still early. But I’m talking with a very cool person, who will remain nameless here because of privacy, and I’m having a good time with that as well. Life is fantastic. Now, wait a week for photos. Why? Because I am lazy, haha.