Taste 50 Kinds of Sake at This Ramen Resturant
You could sidestep that problem by drinking at a ramen restaurant to begin with. But the downside is that most of them stock only the most basic alcoholic drinks, often limited to a Japanese macrobrew beer and lemon shochu cocktails. Tokyo’s Arizuka is different.
Sure, it might look like just another ramen restaurant. Located in the downtown Jinbocho neighborhood, the sign above the entrance says “ramen,” and there’s a machine out front to buy meal tickets from. But take a look at the menu and you’ll see an option for an all-you-can-drink sake course!
And no, Arizuka doesn’t expect you to settle for repeated refills of some cheap, generic house sake. Instead, it keeps over 50 varieties of sake—from respected brewers across Japan—on hand. These are located in refrigerators on the second floor, but the all-you-can-drink plan is available for customers sitting in the first floor’s non-smoking section as well, with waitstaff bringing you drinks as you request them (customers on the second floor serve themselves). Oh, and while most all-you-can-drink plans in Japan are two-hour deals, Arizuka’s is valid from whenever you choose to start until last call at 11 p.m.
Sake is best when enjoyed with food, and to handle your hunger while you’re slaking your thirst the all-you-can drink plan also includes all-you-can-eat gyoza (pot stickers). They're delivered to your table straight from the wok, with lightly crisped skin and your choice of garlic or shiso (an herb sometimes referred to as "Japanese basil") to season the meaty filling.
Not a fan of dumplings? No problem! The plan gives you all-you-can-eat kara-age fried chicken too.
And since Arizuka is first and foremost a ramen restaurant, you also get a single, half-sized serving of ramen brought to your table when you’re ready to call it a night.
While there’s no dessert, the lineup of high-quality sake, including premium junmai daiginjo brews, was enough to have even us forgetting about sweets for a while.
Honestly, the individual appeals of sake, gyoza, or kara-age would be enough to have us visiting for an unlimited amount of any one, but with all three bundled together, Arizuka easily justifies the ¥5,000 (US$46) it charges for the course, and we’re triply happy that it’s part of Tokyo’s restaurant landscape.
For more information including the address of Arizuka, be sure to click on the full story below from SoraNews24!
Read full story: soranews24.com
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