
this troll pretty picky. must eat michelin star
[edit] all tongue in cheek. no offence intended to anyone. lets just get this thread on its way to where ever it should be
awesome link.
looks good but it looks like the normal chao shao ramen le ( i m no ramen guru so share with us ! whats so special about it ?)
this troll pretty picky. must eat michelin star
[edit] all tongue in cheek. no offence intended to anyone. lets just get this thread on its way to where ever it should be
awesome link.
looks good but it looks like the normal chao shao ramen le ( i m no ramen guru so share with us ! whats so special about it ?)
Anyway, ramen is only 20-30% presentation. If you must be picky, then the noodles, soup base, quality of toppings and even the temperature of the soup and layering of oil on top counts towards excellence. Frankly, we will just plain enjoy the ramen without second thought. If you ask me, enjoying the food is way more impt than being able to list out 100 reasons why it's good. Good things don't need to think so much lah.
+1
absolutely agree with that. i think its best to take a wabi-sabi approach. appreciate what we have and enjoy it for its sake. no need to apply external standards.
that said, i still don't believe in excessive queuing or 6-month-in-advance-reservations for so-called good food. My time is more precious than my stomach, i prefer relaxing in a second-best restaurant than being frustrated in a first-classed one.![]()
oh yea ! company and being comfortable in the setting applies as well. nothing can beat the japanese hanami parties. booze + company + picnics = awesome !
haha, that one i no chance. maybe you can do it on exchange!
I was watching a japanese travel show. There is this small shop in Yanaka, Tokyo the specializes in monjayaki parties. He only serves one or 2 tables a day, the group size must be at least 4-7 ppl. First course if tataki tuna, second course is a 1-kg block of wagyu rib-roast, grilled on the teppan, then sliced and topped with fried garlic and salt. Next is a gigantic mince katsu, surrounded by cabbage, on the grill. You cut the katsu and the flooding meat juices cooks the cabbage. Then a 2-ltr bowl of monja yaki, with seafood, noodles, vegetables, etc etc. Looked bloody good.
awesome... wow.. thats like mouth watering. even the description makes it sound like a feast. tataki tuna... (whats that btw?)
tataki is seared tuna sliced and tossed with dressing and toppings.
The segment was quite fast, i think the price is fixed at 15K yen for 4-7 people.

i cant find any 100 yen shshi.....the cheapest i found is 126 yen

i m not a foodie, but i love the kaiten sushis.
cheap and good is my motto in japan.
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i cant find any 100 yen shshi.....the cheapest i found is 126 yen