The View from the Towers 塔からの眺め A web log by Nigel Ruddock of life in Germany as an expat, with excursions to Japan and the UK.

Tag: food

  • ⛩️ Hoshikawa, Odawara 星川, 小田原市

    6th January 2026年1月6日

    🔵 I wake up in the middle of the night. My feet are freezing. Socks, that’s what I need now. Hiking socks 🧦!

    But why is my room so cold? I think of that photo I posted last week. Of the wooden framework of a new house being built. Japanese houses do not have central heating 🤔. When you enter a cold room you just flick on the air conditioning unit, which doubles as a heater in winter. And a very effective one at that. A completely different concept of heating compared to that in Europe. It makes sense.

    1月は寒いですが、晴れています

    🔵 Since New Years Day Japan has been in a holiday modus. Look: here is Japanese man enjoying his Austin Healey Sprite…….

    星川の古い英国製スポーツカー

    Everyone has time – to eat, to drink, to take a walk, to go shopping – to relax in other words. Time to wear a kimono,time to bring the children on an outing. Time for the family. And I notice how strong that latter tradition is.

    🔵 Let’s start with New Year’s Eve.

    At my host family’s house in Hoshikawa, relatives, guests and friends are all gathered………

    まずは大晦日から始めましょう。

    It’s a make your own sushi job…..first grab some Nori (rolled out seaweed)……add some rice and off you go…..yummy!

    I lost count of the courses……

    Yu-san seemed to be in charge of the sake, which flowed freely……

    酒はゆうさんが担当のようでした

    Whilst Bibi, Isabell and Lavi share a joke in one corner…..

    🔵 Before the stroke of midnight we all had to eat Soba noodles. It’s a tradition…….

    そば

    🕛!

    夜中

    Then it’s coats and shoes on and off to the Shinto shrine……

    Tachibana Jinja
    橘樹神社

    🔵 It’s at Tennocho, only about 10 mins walk from the house. We shuffle forward in the long queue, passing under the sacred Tori gateposts…..

    The moon looks down from above…..

    Photo: Misako-san

    🔵 We finally approach the shrine. Here, two by two, we shake the thick bell rope, throw in our offering, bow and clap hands together. We wish for good fortune in the coming year….

    🔵 At the stand nearby we collect a yummy (free!) sake from a tent and huddle around a big warm fire. I notice that the local Yokohama fireman have taken over the responsibility here. I feel privileged to be a part of this really rather intimate old Japanese tradition.

    🔵 The next day, New Year’s Day, the celebrations continued. With a very special meal, using tableware brought out only once a year…..

    ……and bearing the Kanakura family crest – a cross formed by two feathers….

    Photo: Isabell

    A special teapot…..

    Lavi helps by making a sweet brocade egg cake called Nishiki Tamago (錦玉子)……

    Photo: Isabell

    Thank you Misako-san for all the delicious cooking 👏👏👏!


    🔵 Yes, the nights are cold. But the days are bright, dry and sunny.

    I need to get out and take in the fresh January air. With a benevolent air of politeness, cleanliness and punctuality, the Tokaido Line train deposits me in the coastal town of Odawara. It is a charming place, with a pretty castle, a wide open beach and a busy fishing port. It also happens to be on the route of the Ekiden – an annual running event. Spot a runner…..😅

    小田原市. (駅伝)

    The castle is easier to spot…..

    小田原市

    You enter the inner ramparts via a bridge over the moat…..

    …….and pass through one of the imposing gates..

    🔵 Soon you can see the heavy toll that the 1923 Great Kantō Earthquake  had on the place. At one point a whole section of rampart simply slide down the hill and has been there ever since…

    But thanks to restoration and rebuilding the clean lines of the Edo-era castle can be appreciated….

    Early plum blossoms near the inner moat….

    …a display of wattle and daub….

    …the impressive main keep rises up at the centre of the complex….

    🔵 Usually there is very little to see inside these buildings. There are lots of very steep stairs and slatted windows. You climb up to the top for the view of course. But today the holiday crowds had formed a long queue at the entrance, so I headed down to the sea instead.

    🔵 Whimsical manholes were set into the pavements……

    And even the drains received artistic attention….

    Ignoring google maps, I found a way under the main road to reach the beach….

    小田原市.

    …a beach not unlike Brighton in Sussex….

    ビーチはイギリスのブライトンを思い出させます

    With a Wiltshire touch..(bizarre!)

    ストーンヘンジ!

    ……someone had built little stupa to adorn the scene….

    ….and at one point, in one of nature’s flourishes, a fresh water stream meets the ocean…..

    小川が海と出会う

    I headed for the harbour.

    🔵 When I first came to Japan I had a naive image of a land where ladies played the koto or strolled in their kimonos under parasols. Of ancient wooden houses nestling in valleys, neon flashing cities and, and, and, and. All this is still there.

    But I was not prepared for the daring civil engineering – a necessary skill in a country where roads and railways have to use the limited space available, especially along the coast. There is beauty here aswell……

    私は日本の大胆な土木工学に感心しています

    …..which sits cheek by jowl beside the traditional…..here a fish restaurant …

    …a boat enters the harbour undeterred…..

    船が港に入る

    It is a day boat,. The fish market has already dealt with todays’ haul….

    今日の魚市場は終了です

    …and a young heron perches on the roof eyeing any available left-overs….

    サギ

    🔵 Being a tourist can be hard work, and sometimes you just need to sit down, open your rucksack and enjoy whatever it was you bought at that convenience store……in this case a dorayaki…mmmm….https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorayaki

    But the boats never rest…

    whilst the birds circle above….

    Time to head home…..

    家に帰る時間です

    Thank you for reading, and feel free to forward on to anyone who might be interested.

    読んでくれてありがとう!。ご興味がある方にはお気軽に転送してください。

    See you またね 🙋‍♂️

    nigelwruddock@gmail.com

    https://www.instagram.com/nigelruddock/

    The End

    終わり🏯

  • Japan Flashback 🚅 Sendai 仙台

    12th April 2025年4月12日

    Sendai is about 360 km north of Tokyo – that’s about 21/2 hours with the Tohoku Shinkansen (bullet train). First, I give myself plenty of time to navigate Tokyo station………..

    忙しい旅行者。東京駅

     and find my platform……..

    私の電車はどこですか?

    A Shinkansen glides in smoothly……..

    新幹線が到着する

    The smartly dressed cleaners are ready with rubbish bags (holding them out to passengers as they disembark). One has a small hoover. Announcements are made. A civilised queue waits on the platform. When I think of Frankfurt Station….no…don’t..

    If you are not sure which is your train just get on the one which is going at the time published. It will be the right one….

    印象的な

    A cool wind greets me as I step out of the train at Sendai a few hours later.  I walk to my hotel, crossing the bus lanes and other traffic on high overhead pedestrian bridges. I’m not good at heights, but the hotel 8th floor is bearabIe. It could be worse……..

    仙台のホテル

    It’s only early afternoon, so I decide to walk to the castle (or what’s left of it)…..It was a stiff climb, but well worth it……

    仙台城

    At the top, Masamune Date, the powerful feudal lord of Sendai, glares out imperiously over the countryside and the sea….

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_Masamune

    He chose a good site for his castle, I must say…..

    街の素晴らしい景色

    Add a few early blossoms and he doesn’t look quite so fierce…..

    東京より遅い開花

    At important historical sites in Japan you will often see these great cedars – more of them anon….

    大きな杉

    Sendai is not really a tourist destination, but the place is a-buzz. Come evening and the Izakayas (pubs) and restaurants are heaving with young people eating, drinking, talking animately and laughing. Whilst outside the buses and taxis and cars seem to weave past on a sort of smooth wave……..

    仙台の夜

    A shopping mall…..

    The next day I used the circular bus route which links most of the historical sites around the city. The old feudal lords of Japan always found good spots to be laid to rest ( a prime example is the last Shogun’s -Tokugawa Ieyasu – shrine in Nikko, Tochigi ). The lord of the Tohoku region was no exception – Masamune Date. His mausoleum – the Zuihoden, originally built in 1636,  is a blaze of extravangant colour unlike anywhere else in Japan. You start first with a modest temple in a small garden….

    From here it’s a steep climb up to the mausoleum itself…..(the more important the ruler, the tougher the climb. Well that’s my experience).

    You pass the Nirvana gateway (as all good Buddhists know, Nirvana means reaching a state of enlightenment where worldly desires are no longer an issue and you escape the cycle of birth and rebirth)………..

    The mausoleum – front view

    藩主の瑞鳳殿

    派手な色彩

    The adjoining museum, which has relics of the pre -1945 original…….

    It may disappoint Europeans to learn that this whole complex is actually a replica of the original. But this doesn’t seem to worry the Japanese. There are colour postcards of the place pre -1945, and it looks exactly the same. Obviously the Americans wanted to destroy the port of Sendai, but fire bombing a 17thc. historical site, way outside the city?

    Leaving the precincts of the areal I took a woodland walk back down the hill.

    私は丘を下って森の中を散歩しました。

    At one point I came across a graveyard for children of the ruling classes….

    貴族の子女の墓地

    …. some of these cedars are about 380 years old….

    杉の樹齢は約380年です

    Before I had left for Sendai there was a job I had to do. I have a little friend who has just discovered the joys of pulling a bow across a string. But she is still not yet 3 years old! So did I have a violin small enough for her? As luck would have it, yes –  and it was easy to smuggle it into the overhead locker on the plane. Time to do a delivery in Sagamihara…

    Making someone happy. Is that not one of the greatest joys there is?

    幸福 🙂

    Meiko-chan was soon grabbing the bow – none of that beginners’ pizzicato for her….

    最初のステップ

    …and her brother was not to be left out…giving me a cheeky smile across the table…..

    小さな波

    Of course you soon end up on the floor….

    Kotaro-chan

    音楽一家

    As always, thank you for reading, and if you know anyone who might be interested in this blog then do send it on.

    音楽一家 🎶

    ~

    読んでくれてありがとう

    See you……. matane!

    Nigel 🖋️

    nigelwruddock@gmail.com.

    https://www.instagram.com/nigelruddock/

    THE END  終わる

  • Japan Flashback 🌸 Hodogaya &  Sumida 保土ヶ谷, 墨田

    7th April 2025 年4月7日

    There is an expression here (in Germany)…..”mir fällt die Decke auf den Kopf ” (lit. The roof is falling on my head )……😣….in other words, I need to get out of my little town – now  💨 So…………………

    off we go……..Two stops to Dreiech-Buchschlag station, then a bus to the airport…..

    空港に行く

    I’ve found a new route to go east. First go to Copenhagen and then get on an SAS flight. I’d never used SAS before, but was impressed. The aircraft was new and the crew were a friendly bunch with a very Danish sense of humour……

    SAS

    The food was excellent. However, I had to ask my fellow passenger what an upcycled  banana was……. (apparently, instead of throwing away brown bananas, the Danes put them in cakes- an excellent idea).

    「アップサイクル」は私にとって新しい言葉です

    We “lost” a night, and caught up with the dawn somewhere over China……

    …avoiding Russian airspace on the way….

    Japan was rather cold and damp on arrival, but that at least meant that the cherry blossoms and camelias were somehow more intense in colour than usual.

    星川

    カメリア

    My home base is always with the Kanakura family in Hodogaya Ward, just outside Yokohama. After I had complimented my host on the new tatami mats in the guest room, I wandered into town to do some shopping and get a simple meal. The local department store did the trick….some tasty mackerel in dark sauce…very yummy and as usual far too cheap for the quality….

    イオンでの簡単な食事

    Aeon department store…

    It seems you never have to go far in Japan before you meet some little surprise or other.  I smiled to myself when I came scross this little mini in a parking lot….

    有名なイギリス車…..

    Quite apart from it being a shining collector’s item, the Mini is ideal for Japanese cities….and what a nice colour……

    I have never seen any tourists in Hodogaya, except for the students who stay at Misako- san’s house. The Katabira river separates the area in two, and has a nice promenade running down one side. There are no crowds here, so you can enjoy the cherry blossoms in peace…..

     …whilst of course taking advantage of the numerous eating places en route. Like this Ramen shop, for example……..uncomplicated and good…..cabbage and bean sprouts in a yummy soup…..

    天王町の美味しいラーメン

    …….free water is a given, as well as lots of sauces to pep up your Ramen if you feel the need….

    The street is a classic Japanese side street with lots on offer….(not only food…er…..)….

    天王町

    Nice to see my feline friends again……

    4匹の猫のうち2匹だけ

    So what’s new in Hodogaya? Well, more houses are being ingeniously squeezed onto the hillside….

    巧妙な日本の建築

    …..although odd relics of post-war housing still exist…..

    古い家

    …and house renovation firms are busy……

    仕事がたくさんある

    And whether it is a kindergarten play session, a baseball practice or old folk playing a sort of croquet, there is always something happenening in the local park…..

    峰岡公園

    Apropos baseball (野球 yakyu)……..in a local sports shop……

    野球

    There is peace to be found up the hill at the local Buddhist temple……

    Koeisan Hossho Temple

    光栄山法性寺

    Around town.……The well known delivery service Kuroneko (black cat)

    ……Greetings from the Yokohama City Fire Dept.

    It’s hard to describe, but everybody seems uplifted by the appearance of the cherry blossoms……….

    Later in the week, when I had recovered from my jet-lag  jisaboke  時差ぼけ, I meet up with my Sensei (teacher) in Tokyo. First we went up to a 32nd floor to a view point next to the Tokyo Skytree. Here you can look down on the Sumida district and further……

    A short walk brings us to the Sakura Bridge Bashi  ( featured in the film Perfect Days https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QzZBbX5A1FA )

    ..and a stroll down the banks of the River Sumida, where people are enjoying themselves. It is a very Japanese scene.

    にほんぽい

    There is no loud music or commercials; but picknicking, walking, talking and eating……a nice vibe…..Hanami  花見

    花見

    😋

    The names of sponsoring firms are tastefully displayed on the lanterns…..

    The author……feeling good…..!

    良い気分

    Later on we end up in a seafood Izakaya near Shinbashi station. Without Miki-san I would have had my work cut out ordering food…….

    Sashimi – oysters, squid, octopus, yellowtail, tuna…..with tempura on the side (battered pumpkin, leek and shrimp)

    刺身 – 牡蠣、イカ、タコ、ハマチ、マグロ…天ぷら(カボチャ、ネギ、エビ)

    I think we need a close-up……

    Delicious 😋 (except for the baby squid, which I still cannot manage, even after several years).

    Some Sake is essential after such a meal…..

    Shinbashi……simply countless eating places….

    新橋

    As always, thank you for reading, and if you know anyone who might be interested in this blog then do send it on.

    読んでくれてありがとう

    See you……. matane!

    Nigel 🖋️

    nigelwruddock@gmail.com.

    https://www.instagram.com/nigelruddock/

    THE END  終わる