Some of you may have noticed a lot of food related entries here lately with most of them involving ramen which is kind of the unofficial national dish here living in the shadows of sushi. For those who still don’t know, ramen originally came from China and is noodle soup consisting of noodles, sauce, broth and toppings which have created endless variations. I can’t really tell the difference but food is an important part of Japanese culture and they can supposedly taste such minimal differences.
With my latest interest in this dish we stopped off in Yokohama on the way back from the previously blogged Kamakura trip. This city on the outskirts of Tokyo played host to the 2002 World Cup final but on the menu for us on Sunday night was a trip to the Ramen museum which isn’t so much a museum as we know it but a food court set in a 1950s style Tokyo serving ramen dishes from different places around Japan.
An entry charge of 300 yen (about £1.50) took us inside where we could see the history of ramen noodles in Japan and some rather dull displays on the noodles, soups, toppings and bowls used as well as how the noodles are made.
Once downstairs from there we started with a very tasty Kyushu ramen dish sampler called Komurasaki and followed it up with Hachiya from Hokkaido before my stomach started doing cartwheels! That however didn’t stop me from picking up some chocolate ramen from the gift shop on the way out which i have just tried. Not as disgusting as it may sound but nothing too special either.
Three Year Japanniversary
* Wed 19th Nov 2003 – Left England
* Thurs 20th Nov 2003 – Arrived in Japan
* Sat 22nd Nov 2003 – England beat the Aussies to win the Rugby World Cup
Can it really be three years since the above events happened? Its not so long but it sure seems like it! When I met up with some other N*va recruits at Heathrow I had no real idea what lay ahead as I had never taught anything and didn’t know too much about Japan either. Arriving late at night I was driven to my new home in Matsudo (which was in the middle of nowhere as far as i was concerned back then) in the pouring rain and must have wondered what I was letting myself in for. The following day was just about settling in and trying to navigate my way around the area and working out the train system to go a few stops away to apply for the ‘alien’ card which all foreigners have to carry in Japan. The kind of thing I take for granted now but at the time it wasn’t so simple.
The day after that was the ‘must-see’ Rugby World Cup Final for England against our sporting rivals from Australia. I saw a magazine advert for the game being screened at an Irish bar so I made my way down to Roppongi to ‘Paddy Foleys’ where I witnessed one of the great moments in English sporting history when Jonny Wilkinson slotted the winner in the dying seconds of extra-time.
How things have changed since then!! England’s rugby team has been on the slide ever since and it feels like I have been here for ages but there are certainly enough times when it is not such plain sailing which keeps me on my toes and still makes it an interesting experience to live in Tokyo.