Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts

Sunday, March 13, 2016

Mount Usuzan

From Travel-Around-Japan:
Mount Usu ("Usuzan" in Japanese) is a 737-meters-high active volcano, and is located only 3 km south-southeast of the hot spring resort of Lake Toya. 


It is one of most active volcanoes in Japan, then it erupted four times within last 100 years (in 1910, 1944, 1977 and 2000).

You can go up to the top of the mountain with a ropeway, which is on the east slope. 
The boarding point is at the foot of Showa-shinzan.
The hubby waiting to board the gondola

Me in the Usuzan Gondola!
You can checkout more information about the Usuzan Gondola

The view from the gondola:
Spamming more photos of the scenery from Mount Usuzan. You have a view of the Lake Toya, Showa-shinzan, the Pacific Ocean and some craters fuming volcanic smoke.
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How to get to here

By route bus:

About 15 minutes from "Toya-ko Onsen" (the hot spring resort of Lake Toya) to "Showa-shinzan".
We can get the ropeway there.

 

By car:

On the expressway, about 133 km from Sapporo to Date Exit. It takes about 1 hour and 30 minutes.
Then about 10 km to Showa-shinzan.

For the full itinerary of my Hokkaido trip, checkout here.
 

Friday, March 6, 2015

Interesting facts about Japan

Sharing on some interesting facts about Japan which makes this country super unique and always my fav country to visit all the time!

1) Secret to the Long Healthy Lives of Japanese - Take Natto!
Natto is a traditional Japanese food made from fermented soybeans, and is characterized by its strong taste, pungent smell, and gooey texture. Natto isn’t well-known outside of Japan, and its acquired taste and unpleasant appearance probably confines it to a limited audience. Nonetheless, natto can be found in some Western health food stores for one reason: it is highly nutritious. In fact, the health benefits of natto are so considerable that some stores sell it in capsule form so that people can take it as a dietary supplement.

2) Pachinko

From wikipedia:
Pachinko (パチンコ) is a mechanical game originating in Japan and is used as both a form of recreational arcade game and much more frequently as a gambling device, filling a Japanese gambling niche comparable to that of the slot machine in Western gaming. A pachinko machine resembles a vertical pinball machine, but has no flippers and uses a large number of small balls. The player fires balls into the machine, which then cascade down through a dense forest of pins. If the balls go into certain locations, they may be captured and sequences of events may be triggered that result in more balls being released. The object of the game is to capture as many balls as possible. These balls can then be exchanged for prizes. Pachinko machines were originally strictly mechanical, but modern ones have incorporated extensive electronics, becoming similar to video slot machines.



3)  Japanese toilets are famous for their high-tech functionality, heated toilet seats, and even those fake flushing noise buttons installed in women’s restrooms in Japan. The king of toilets in Japan is Toto, the company that brings warmth and comfort to Japanese behinds.





4) Japan is home to the world's craziest vending machine. It’s not so much the machines themselves but the variety of things sold in them. Beverages by the hundreds of variety beer, hot tea or coffee...and yes, even panties and porn.
Varieties of soft drinks
Ice-cream vending machine
Coffee maker vending machine where you can watch the screen how it makes!
Japanese snack vending machine
Beer vending machine too!
5) Japanese Food Display can be found in many restaurants in Japan. 
These incredibly realistic food models function to give a visual idea of what kinds of foods the restaurant serves while at the same time appealing to the senses of would-be diners in order to entice them inside. 
These plastic food models are often a saving grace for foreign diners who do not speak Japanese.

6) Japanese Bathing Etiquette
Whenever you enter the bathroom, you have to put on special bathroom slippers. Don't forget to take them off when you're done, that's a big no-no because if you keep them on, you will contaminate the rest of the house.


If you plan on taking a shower, be aware, that you will take the shower outside of the bathtub!! See the photo below, the shower head is not directly in the bath tub but it's outside!
You're supposed to wash your body while outside the tub, with soap of course. The bathtub is only used for soaking and you are only allowed to enter after you have cleaned yourself thoroughly. Soap should not get into the bathtub! The water stays in the bathtub and will be used for other people in the house.  Everyone uses the same water, but it's clean water because they clean themselves with the shower first. 

7) Drink miso soup without using spoon

I think it's norm in Malaysia to drink any soup with a spoon but not for Japanese drinking miso soup. You should drink the miso soup out of the bowl as if it were a cup, and fish out the solid food pieces with your chopsticks. 
So..dun go and ask waiter for a spoon when you are in Japan to drink miso soup lo! 

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Fresh grilled king crab & scallop @Kitanogurume - Sapporo Central Wholesale Market

Following from my post on Kitanogurume - Sapporo Central Wholesale Market here, I have my satisfying lunch here: - fresh grilled king crabbies and scallop! Listen dee also saliva drip....slurpp..so dun envy ya when read this post!

The restaurant is just directly above the market, so you get to eat all the fresh seafood from the market below directly!
Interior of the restaurant
That's the cooking area
Our long lunch table..but why look so empty one ah?
Hmm..only scallop nia for lunch?
Dumm..dee..dee..dummmm....where is my food??
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boss..where is my food??
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TADAAaaaaa...that looks more like a feast on a long table rite!
Abalone! Can I have more pls? *blink* blink*
Each of us have our own scallop..not sharing yo!
And salmon fish too!
And when you eat seafood, how can you forget to have it with sake rite? Perfect combination!
The main course of the meal - our poor crabby before we attack it!
Ok..that's all. Remember to checkout full itinerary of my Hokkaido trip here.

Monday, October 20, 2014

Gantetsu Ramen @ Rera Chitose Outlet Mall

If you refer my Hokkaido itinerary here, you will noticed that the whole trip we did not try any ramen at all. So, the boyfie insisted that he must have at least one hokkaido ramen before we leave here. So right before we board the plane to go back, we had Gantetsu Hokkaido Ramen for our lunch in Rera Chitose Outlet Mall. In this factory outlet, there are tons of ramen restaurant..so we just pick the ones with the most lost queue that time. Since most ppl queue one, should taste good rite?
Long queue in front of the Gantetsu Ramen Restaurant
Boyfie in the queue while i kepo-ing around to snap photos
So how does interior looks like?



Now, let's see what is yummy in the menu
Gantetsu Ramen menu

Average price for a bowl of ramen is around JPY830 to JPY880 (about RM25+)



Our super delicious *thumbs up* ramen are served...


 Detail shot of the ramen we ordered:


I just found out they have branch in KL here too and it's in 2nd floor Isetan One Utama only! Yoo hoo..can go there satisfy my hokkaido ramen cravings.
 
How to get here?
Gantetsu Hokkaido Ramen
Address: 
Rera Chitose Outlet Mall
1-2-1 Kashiwadai-minami, Chitose City, Hokkaido 066-8765 
TEL: +81-123-42-3000
Website: http://gantetu.co.jp/

For the full itinerary of my Hokkaido trip, checkout here.
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