Just wanted to post an update from Tokyo...
We started our trip with two nights at a ryokan in Yugawara, about an hour outside Tokyo via train. Yugawara is on the Pacific Ocean, but the ryokan is up in the mountains on the outskirts of town.
A ryokan is a traditional Japanese inn and--at least on the higher end--traditional, local food and hot-springs baths are the primary attraction. Ours featured both. Breakfast and dinner were served privately in our room by our female room attendant. Dinners included about 25 courses/bites and breakfast was 15-17. We were asked about food allergies/dislikes in advance, and had a couple choices to make at each meal (beef, fish or king crab for shabu shabu, etc.). We ate two dinners and two breakfasts at the ryokan and didn't see a single overlapping dish. Because of our ryokan's proximity to the sea, there was a heavy emphasis on seafood, but over the almost 90 courses they fed us while we were there,
we had a few dishes that included pork, a wagyu beef and at least one chicken dish. (My internet connection here is slow right now so I can't upload pictures, but you should be able to see those I've already uploaded
here.)
We stayed at a ryokan called
Hakuunsou, which I'd highly recommend. Ryokans are not cheap--we got one of the better rooms (which private outdoor bath)--and it cost us about $750 per night. When you consider, however, that it included a dinner which probably would have cost the two of us $300-400 here in Tokyo (if not more), it becomes a better deal. (Breakfast obviously would have been costly too, but as someone why typically eats a $1 granola bar for breakfast, I have a harder time factoring that cost into the equation.)
The ryokan was also the perfect cure for jetlag...the right speed for days when you're moving slowly!
We got to Tokyo on Friday, and have had two fantastic dinners since arriving. (We'd asked the hotel concierge to make reservations several weeks ago, which was convenient given the language barrier & time difference.)
On Friday we ate at
Bankreki Ryukodu. This is contemporary kaiseki dining in a very contemporary, zen setting. They'd asked us to select one of four preset menus in advance, and--given no info other than price--we'd selected the Y16,000 menu (about $200 per person). (The range was about Y10,000 to Y31,000, and we were thrilled with our choice.) That included 7 or 8 courses that were fabulous: Conger eel with a Japanese gazpacho-like tomato puree, nigiri that included a lightly seared baracuda and edible wasabi leaf, several pieces of sashimi, miso soup, a wagyu hamburger served in a sizzling stone bowl, rice with fresh ginger to close the savory part of our meal (seriously the best rice I've ever eaten) and a sweet rice cake for dessert. (I've left a course out, I'm sure.) Beautiful setting and fantastic food.
Tonight we had dinner at
Kijima, a restaurant specializing in hot pots. The staff spoke limited English, but our hotel was kind enough to get a menu translated for us. We opted for the chicken hot pot dinner, which seemed to be the house specialty (costing Y5000 per person), plus added on a course of wagyu beef cooked on a hot rock for an additional Y2000. I'm falling into a food coma, so I'm sure to forget all of the courses, but it included a couple one-bite appetizers (one piece of nigiri, marinated shrimp & squid, and some grilled salmon), sashimi (including the most tender piece of maguro I've ever eaten), a salad with lettuce and pieces of pork belly dressed with toasted sesame dressing, then another started with a battered piece of cod, fresh tofu, enoki mushrooms in a thick mushroomy sauce. The hot pot started with some of the broth being stirred into a cup with raw quails egg, making the richest, most delicious egg drop soup I've ever eaten. Our waitress then added ground chicken meatballs, pork belly, cabbage, fresh tofu, mushrooms and mizuna and left it to simmer for a while. All in all, it was used for four courses: The egg soup, a bowl with everything but the mushrooms (which needed longer to cook), a bowl with everything including the mushrooms, and the final bowl (which we tried to skip but thankfully--and thanks to the language barrier--didn't skip) featuring the broth with chewy, handmade ramen noodles. Dessert was a coconut-almond tofu custard that was to die for.
Hakuunsou
716-1, Miyakami, Yugawara-machi, Ashigarashimo-gun, Kanagawa-ken 259-0314
Banrekiryukodo
2-33-5 Higashi-Azabu, Minato-ku, tel: (03) 3505-5686
Kijima
1-23-3 Aobadai Towa Building, 3F, Tokyo, Phone 03/5720-7366
(Edited to add ryokan food photos link.)