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Butter Case by NODA HORO

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I have been looking for a butter case for a long time and I finally found my favorite one!
It’s NODA HORO Butter Case 450g produced by the Japanese manufacturer Noda Horo (http://www.nodahoro.com/).

I usually buy a CALPIS Butter (450g) at the supermarket so this butter case is the perfect size and easy to stock. Additionally, its look in the fridge is very SIMPLE and BEAUTIFULshine

KYODO : Yo-shoku BAL Ultra

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Dear Foodies, do you know there are western-style Japanese meals in Japan? It is called “Yo-shoku”. (By the way, “Washoku” means Japanese meals!riceball)

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For example, Hamburger, “Tonkatsu” (pork cutlet), Curry and rice, Croquette, Fried shrimp, “Omu-rice” (omelet with a filling of ketchup-seasoned fried rice), Pilaf and so on.
There is one of my favorite restaurant in Kyodo area. The name of the restaurant is called “Ultra” and located just a few minutes walk from the Kyodo station.
When you enter the restaurant, you can see the big counter table. I like to sit near the counter table and watch chefs do cooking.

There are several fixed menus on lunch time. My recommend menus are hamburger, fried shrimp and fried chicken with vinegar and tartar sauce.

This time, I ordered the hamburger. It always comes with Miso soup and Japanese rice.
(Don’t you think it’s really western-style Japanese meal? I think so!)

When you cut the meat, you can see and taste the juicy sauce from the hamburger! Yummy!!

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Hamburger course also has pasta and cabbage salad on a same plate. Plus, Miso soup and Japanese rice. [850 yen]

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Special Lunch menu for the day : Fried chicken with vinegar and tartar sauce course.[850 yen]

Yo-shoku BAL Ultra

Address : 1-19-2, Kyodo, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo
Tel : 03-6413-9326
Hours : MON-SAT 11:00-15:00/18:00-24:00
Access : 2 minutes walk from Kyodo station, Odakyu-line

KYODO : Ramen-ya Yashigeru

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Dear Foodies, I like Ramen. I sometimes go to Ramen shops by myself and enjoy sipping! noodle

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My neighborhood Kyodo area is famous for ‘Ramen’. It’s one of the competitive area for Ramen shop owners since a lot of students, families and Foodies(like us!) live in this area.

I recently visited the new Ramen shop “Ramen-ya Yashigeru”. The shop is located just a few minutes walk from the Kyodo station. As a landmark, you can find a small billboard on the right side of the Suzuran street. In the shop, there are only 7 seats as you see the photo.


Their Ramen soup is based on “Niboshi” (dried fish) and the fish are all burnt! So you can taste really rich flavor from the soup. Once you sip the soup, you might feel that condensed calcium liquid would be soaked into all of your body!

I usually make my own soup stock mixing with “Kombu”(dried kelp) and “Katsuobushi” (dried bonito flakes). So personally, I felt it’s really new and liked the burnt dried fish based soup. I will definitely go there again!

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‘Burnt Niboshi Ramen’ [800 yen] has chopped onion, spinach, bamboo shoots, roasted pork fillet on top.
Ramen-ya Yashigeru

Address : Dom Kyodo 1F, 3-12-3, Miyasaka, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo
Tel : 03-3425-8651
Hours : TUE-FRI  11:30-15:00/18:00-22:00
           SAT-SUN 11:30-21:00
Access : 2 minutes walk from Kyodo station, Odakyu-line

Oden (Fish Cake Hot Pot) おでん

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Oden is a national dish that is indispensable for winter in Japan. If you go to a convenience store, you will find an oden pot near the cash register. I think there are many Japanese people who are relieved by the scent during checkout. In winter, oden often appears in our homes. I love eating hot oden on cold days.

What is Oden ?

Oden is the hot pot of stewed fish cakes and vegetables. This dish keeps many japanese warm and nourished throughout the winter. Oden is often garnished with some Japanese mustard (wa-garashi) or a salty, citrusy paste (Yuzu kosho).

There are three major regional styles of oden : Kansai style, Kanto style and Nagoya style. Kansai style oden is light and delicate, based on a simple broth of kelp and bonito flake broth with salt. Kanto style oden starts with the Kansai style base, which is then enriched with the addition of soy sauce and sugar. The intense, miso-based Nagoya style is rarely found outside that region.

What are popular Oden menu items ?

– Age-boru : Deep-fried fish cakes (called Satsuma-age) shaped into the form of balls
– Atsu-age : Thick-cut tofu that has been deep-fried; the outer part has a light golden color while the inside remains white and tender
– Chikuwabu : Gluten pounded into a cylindrical shape; it has a chewy texture
– Daikon One of the most popular items in oden; it is cooked until tender
– Fukuro :  A deep-fried tofu packet that is stuffed with vegetables, ground meat, sgurataki (konnyaku noodles) etc.
– Ganmodoki : Tofu into which different items are mixed and then deep-fried
– Gobo-maki : Julienned burdock root surrounded by fish cake and deep-fried
– Hanpen : A steamed fish cake (with light, marshmallow-like texture) often made from shark’s meat and grated yamaimo potato
– Ika maki : Deep-fried fish cake enveloping sliced squid
– Konnyaku : A jelly-like cake mafe from a root vegetable; also referred as devil’s tongue
– Musubi Kombu : Kelp tied in a knot.
– Satsuma-age : Whitefish that is ground and formed into a paste and deep-fried in oil.
– Shirataki : Stings of the root vegetable konnyaku
– Tako : Octopus
– Tamago : Hard-boiled egg
– Tofu : In oden, often grilled tofu called Yakidofu
– Tsumire : Fish paste, made from silver-skinned fish such as sardines
– Yaki chikuwa : Fish paste shaped into a cylinder and grilled

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Where you can buy Oden in Japan ?
For seven or eight months of the year, you will see big pots of steaming oden near the cash registers of convenience stores. It’s not unusual to see a customer walk in, pick up an alcohol and a container of oden, too.  There are several small stores that offers take out only or restaurants that specialize in oden where chefs stand guard over large hot pots with long chopsticks, carefully coddling the ingredients, adding a ladleful of broth here, adding a few fish cakes there, stirring and keeping watch as the night goes on.
You might also like…
1. Osekihan (Festive rice with sweet potato) 
2. Vegan Nikujaga
3. Sukiyaki

Editor’s Note: This post was originally published on November 14, 2014. The post has been updated in January 2, 2021 with more information for the dish and with new images.

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