Pages

Showing posts with label Dinner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dinner. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 14, 2022

Gyūtan Tsukasa (牛タン店 司) Restaurant, Sendai, Japan

Copyright © 2019 Douglas R. Wong. All Rights Reserved.

Wagyu, Kobe, and Matsusaka beef is usually on the minds of visitors to Japan. These well known brands of Japanese beef are on their must try list of foods to eat. While not a brand of beef, but rather a cut of beef, rarely does the word, gyūtan (牛タン) come to mind. While gyūtan is available throughout Japan at yakiniku restaurants, where meat is grilled over a Japanese style barbeque, Sendai is the original home of gyūtan and where the dish is the most well known and popular. In Sendai you can still eat at the restaurant, where in 1948, the dish was developed. [1] Sendai is also the home to many restaurants that only serve gyūtan. While this article is not about the original restaurant where the dish originated, Gyūtan Tsukasa (牛タン店 司) is a typical Sendai gyūtan restaurant serving this dish.

The dish, consisting of pieces of thinly sliced beef tongue cooked over a charcoal grill, is one of least known of Japan's signature foods that visitors must try. The standard serving consists of grilled tongue and pickled vegetables, but is more commonly ordered as part of a set menu (ていしょく, teishoku), which also includes oxtail soup and mugi gohan (麦御飯, steamed white rice with barley). Variations on the set meal include increasing the amount of grilled tongue by 1.5- to 2 times.

Please continue reading the article on my 2018 and 2019 visits to Gyūtan Tsukasa to read about my grilled tongue meals and to see more photographs.

Saturday, September 18, 2021

Midtown BBQ Nagoya Restaurant, Nagoya, Japan

Copyright © 2018 Douglas R. Wong. All Rights Reserved.

Whenever I travel overseas, I want to eat at restaurants that serve food that is local to the area, region, or country. Often this means eating at places where menus are only available in the local language and English is definitely a second language, if spoken at all. In some cases, I would have been able to research ahead of time what the restaurant's specialty is or the signature dishes are, sometimes not. In those cases, I rely on the translator app on my phone, point to a dish that someone else has ordered, or point to a picture of the dish on the menu (this is hard when the menu has no pictures). In Japan, where realistic plastic models of the menu items are displayed outside of restaurants, I have asked one of the staff more than once to come outside, where I point to the model of the dish I want to order. Sometimes I'm surprised at what I ordered, but that's part of the fun of traveling.

I tend to avoid restaurants serving American food unless there is some unique preparation or ingredient in a dish that can only be obtained locally. I originally saw an internet video about Midtown BBQ Nagoya that attracted my attention. The reason I went to visit this restaurant is their use of Japanese Binchōtan charcoal and Japanese Oak to make a 20-hour smoked, 40-pound (18-kg) authentic Japanese A5 Wagyu beef brisket seasoned with a Japanese inspired spice rub.

Please continue reading the rest of the article to see a video on how Midtown BBQ Nagoya makes their Japanese A5 Wagyu beef brisket and to see more photographs of my visit on 26 Oct 2018.

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Gyukatsu Motomura Nishi-Shinjuku (牛かつ もと村 新宿店) Restaurant, Tokyo, Japan

Copyright © 2018 Douglas R. Wong, all rights reserved.

I visited the Gyukatsu Motomura Nishi-Shinjuku (牛かつ もと村 新宿店) Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan on 2 Nov 2018. The specialty of the restaurant is beef tonkatsu, which is deep fried beef, rather than the usual pork tonkatsu found in Japan.

Please continue reading the rest of the article to find out more about my dinner at Gyukatsu Motomura Nishi-Shinjuku and to see more photographs.

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Tonkatsu Dinner at Fujiki Ningyocho (富士喜 人形町 (富士㐂 (フジキ))) Restaurant, Tokyo, Japan

Copyright © 2018 Douglas R. Wong, all rights reserved.

Update on Fujiki Ningyocho, Tokyo, Japan

So I was in Tokyo for a few days at the start of my current travels and went back to eat at Fujiki Ningyocho on 17 Oct, 2019. I wanted to eat the tomahawk tonkatsu that I described in my original post below again.

As with all things in life, the only constant is change. The ownership of the restaurant appears to have changed and while the restaurant still serves tonkatsu, there have been changes to the dish. The restaurant still serves the tomahawk tonkatsu, but it appears that the pork they use has changed from a premium to a more common breed. Do not get me wrong, the tonkatsu served was still good to eat, but it's not what it was before.

There are also English menus available for some of the seasonal dishes, whereas before, all the menus were in Japanese. The price has also dropped a few hundred yen and the weight of the tonkatsu has decreased too, which reinforces my belief that a more common pork breed is being used for the dish.

Also changed is the how the dish is served. No more knife and fork! The dish is presented already cut, like the regular version of tonkatsu served everywhere, obviating the need for a knife and fork needed to eat a whole boned pork rib steak. So you eat the dish with chopsticks.

The condiments have also changed. Whereas before the condiments were spicy, unique, and prepared on-site, the newer owners have opted to use more common (and likely not made on-site) accompaniments to the tonkatsu. Probably the most unfortunate change is the elimination of the yuzu-based condiment that you eat with the tonkatsu (see the original report below). Again, this was a store-made and unique addition to the normal version of the dish that you could not get anywhere else.

Would I still eat there again? If I had never had a tomahawk tonkatsu before, this is still the only place to get this dish and it is well prepared. I would certainly make a trip to this restaurant in that case. Having eaten both versions (the original and new), I would say that while the dish is still unique, it does not warrant another special trip. If I am in the neighborhood, I certainly would eat there again.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...