Saturday, December 5, 2015

Cowboy

Location: Cowboy

Rating: Not great
Meal: Lunch for 2
Price: 3344 yen
Payment:  Credit cards accepted
Dishes: Beef and chicken steak, both with salad bar
English Menu: I think so?  Lots of pictures anyway
Smoking: No




Yeah, all the employees wear cowboy getups (including hats) and call out "Hello" instead of "Irrashaimasse!"  Odd I know.  But their thing is family style steak with a salad bar.  Kind of the same as Big Boy and Stoneburg.  But we needed a restaurant with a parking lot, and it was available.




My steak was pretty tough and gristly.  My wife liked her chicken steak well enough.  The salad bar was ok.




Not the greatest really.



Thursday, December 3, 2015

Y's Lunch

Location: Y's Lunch

Rating: Not great
Meal: Lunch
Price: 900 yen
Payment:  Cash only
Dishes: Spaghetti with scallop flavored sauce
English Menu: No
Smoking: No



Y's Lunch is tucked around a corner/back alley near the Tully's coffee on Blue Street.  It caught my eye as I walked past and I realized I'd never eaten there.  It was quite small, but very bustling, so much so that I could only sit at the rather small counter and awkwardly look at the lady preparing everyone's drinks for my entire meal.


The lunch sets are under 1000 yen, but still in the 900 range, for which I'd expect a full teishoku.  However there were only 2 choices (hamburg or pasta) and come with either salad or a baguette.  Strange...for that price I would think they could afford to give us salad and bread...but oh well.  I got the pasta as they said it had some hotate (something about "small" was said too).  When it turned up it was a fairly simple dish of spaghetti noodles with a scallop (hotate) infused sauce.  Probably made from the dried hotate you can get from Hokkaido.  It tasted...meh.  And the salad was tiny.

Overall, pretty unimpressive.  Had they served a full teishoku, or larger portions, I might have given them an Ok, but as it was it seemed overpriced for what it was.

Monday, November 30, 2015

Malika

Location: Malika

Rating: Not great
Meal: Lunch for 2
Price: 1250 yen
Payment:  Cash only
Dishes:Butter chicken kid's meal, nasi goreng
English Menu:Yes
Smoking: No


My son and I were experimenting with using the bus to get to his friend's house the other day and afterwards found ourselves in Oppama for lunch.  Oppama is a station on the way up from Yokosuka towards Yokohama, but you must be riding on the Red Express or Black Local lines to stop there.  The Green Express doesn't stop there.  Anyway, we wandered a short distance from the station and I spotted the Indian flag in the distance, so that settled it for lunch!  Malika must be a newer restaurant as Google Maps still has an different restaurant listed at that location and visible in Street View.

Kid's butter chicken set with naan

I was hoping maybe this restaurant had escaped the stamp of sameness that pervades all the Indian restaurants in Yokosuka (i.e. Nepalese staff, very simple flavors, sweet naan), but unfortunately that wasn't the case.  My son at his chicken but disliked the texture of the his butter chicken.  I had the "nasi goreng" for something different (nasi goreng is an Indonesian rice dish).  They also had "indian chahan" (aka fried rice) on the menu, to which my son said that Indian chahan would just be biryani wouldn't it?  I don't know, but I didn't try it to find out.  I was sold by the fried egg on top.

Nasi goreng

I liked my nasi goreng, but it wasn't incredible.  It did have some chunks of shrimp in it that I didn't expect.  I had a cold and wasn't tasting very well at the time, so I dumped more spicy sauce on and enjoyed the fire.  I tasted my son's naan and it was still sweet, blech.  I asked where the proprietor was from and sure enough...Nepal.  But he said he wasn't affiliated with any of the 3 main franchises in Yokosuka, so I guess he's going out on his own.  A pity he couldn't make better tasting food.

Friday, November 27, 2015

Denny's

Location: Denny's

Rating: Very good
Meal: Lunch for 3
Price: 3900 yen
Payment: Credit cards accepted
Dishes: Linguini 4 cheese carbonara, porcini hamburg, stewed meat
English Menu: No



We were far afield today, looking for a quick lunch spot with parking, so we headed for Denny's when we saw the familiar sign.  Among "family" style restaurants here in Japan, Denny's is our favorite, thus the Very Good rating despite the food itself being not the best, it's the best in it's category.  Plus they usually have parking.  We actually ate elsewhere than is indicated on the map, but I figured I may as well use Yokosuka's branch as anywhere else, since it's local.

Pass on the caesar salad...


Many people are disappointed by Denny's if they come from the US.  The food selections are definitely not the same.  But I didn't grow up with Denny's so it doesn't bother me.  You can usually find something worth eating on the menu, and the surprising thing is that it usually tastes pretty good!

4 cheese carbonara


My son of course went for the 4 cheese carbonara, my wife got a porcini mushroom hamburg dish, and I had the stewed beef chunks.  We also got something we thought would be vegetables with cheese on top, because we didn't bother to read the katakana name.  It was actually a caesar salad, and not a particularly good one, so pass on that.  But the rest of the dishes were remarkably tasty.

Porcini hamburg

Stewed beef chunks

Tsuru Ton Tan

Location: Tsuru Ton Tan


Rating: Very good
Meal: Lunch for 3
Price: 5380 yen
Payment: Credit cards accepted
Dishes: Special Udon, Creamy Seafood Udon, sukiyaki don, salmon roll, yakiniku roll
English Menu: Yes



For our first meal back from the Philippines, we ate again at Haneda Airport.  It was a little past lunch time, so we thought we might have a chance at getting into the restaurant that usually has the longest line, Tsuru Ton Tan.  We weren't even sure what kind of food they had there, but it was probably good given the line.

"special" udon with tempura


Turns out it's a mainly Udon noodle restaurant, with some side dishes.  There were tons of options on the huge, well laid out menu.  We liked the look of the restaurant "special" udon with the normal broth, but wanted to try a creamy udon as well, so I got the mixed seafood and chicken.  My son didn't like the look of anything so he opted for a sukiyaki don.  We also wanted to sample the sushi rolls, so we got 2 small orders (3 pieces) of a salmon roll and a yakiniku roll.

Creamy udon broth


We have a complicated relationship with udon.  We used to think we loved it, as our first experience was of having it in the US at a Vietnamese restaurant.  When we got to Japan, we found ourselves liking udon less and less, as it just seemed more difficult to eat with less payoff than, say, soba noodles.  It's also a really "cheap" Japanese food, so you usually find it in cheap restaurants with rather nasty old tempura and a very plain broth.  Not much to recommend it.

Sushi rolls


But this place has shown us a glimpse of how excellent real udon can be.  The "special" dish's broth was sooooo delicious, slightly sweet.  And the creamy dish was great too, if a little heavier.  The noodles themselves were really good too.  Both of us were stuffed by the end and couldn't finish it all.  The bowls at this restaurant are enormous, and when you order, they ask if you want 1, 2 or 3 orders of noodles.  When you see the bowls, you'll see why, as they are in a flare shape and get very wide at the top, allowing for a ton of volume if you wanted to add more noodles.  We went with just 1 and it was plenty.

Sukiyaki don


My son's sukiyaki don was really tasty too, though he didn't care for the extra bits of tasty gobo root.  It had that sweet sukiyaki taste and came with a soft egg on top.  My wife preferred the salmon roll (it was smoked salmon) while I liked the yakiniku roll better.

Overall, it was a great reinvigoration of the idea that udon doesn't have to be cheap, nasty and unpleasant.

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Gino's

Location: Gino's


Rating: Excellent
Meal:  Lunch for 5 or 6
Price:  ?? pesos
Payment:  Credit cards accepted
Dishes: Sausage pizza, pesto mushroom pizza, mozzerella pesto with cherry tomatoes, salted egg linguine, bolognese
English Menu: Yes
Smoking: No



Gino's is an amazing Italian spot near where my dad lives in Makati.  For our last dinner in the Philippines, my dad really wanted us to eat there.  We were a bit skeptical considering the sad excuses for Italian food (with a few exceptions) in Japan.  But we figured it wouldn't hurt anything.  Wow, are we ever glad we went!  This place blew every Italian place we've ever eaten at before out of the water.  The pizza crusts were so good, I was actually eating the crust first instead of discarding useless hunks of bread like I usually do.  It reminded me of good chewy homemade bread.  There was a very interesting salted egg linguine too.  Salted eggs are a filipino specialty and usually are identified by dark purple died egg shells.  They are, of course, quite salty and the yolk turns a bit grainy in the process.  They never have appealed to me much, but this was a very interesting tasting dish that benefited from the peculiar flavor.   Another dish we loved was a pocket of mozzerella (real and very soft) stuffed with pesto and surrounded by little cherry tomatoes (a bit tart) covered in olive oil and basil leaves.  This variation on caprese was so incredibly delicious, we ordered another one.  After the first sausage pizza (the sausage was incredible), we also ordered a pesto and mushroom pizza with walnuts and kesong puti (water buffalo cheese).  The cheese was a little disappointing in that it didn't have that salty tang I recall from previous experience with kesong puti, but the overall package was great.  I didn't taste the bolognese personally, but I'm told it was also great. 

Salted duck, mozzerella, sausage pizza


So...wow, that was a wonderful end to our trip to the Philippines!  We will miss the great food here so much and look forward to our next visit.

Pesto mushroom pizza

Bolognese

New Bombay

Location: New Bombay


Rating: Excellent
Meal:  Lunch for 3
Price:  2450 pesos
Payment:  Credit cards accepted
Dishes: Sweet/salty/pandan buko lassi, mutton biryani, butter chicken curry, tandoor chicken tikka, lots of different kinds of bread
English Menu: Yes
Smoking: No



New Bombay is another in a series of restaurants near my dad's apartment in Makati.  He told us it was quite good, so we decided to try it for lunch one day.  Wow...it was fabulous!  They had at least 5 different types of bread on the menu and so much good stuff we wished we could have tried.  But we limited ourselves to a tandoor chicken tikka, mutton biryani and butter chicken (for my son).  Everything had excellent, complex Indian flavors and you could see the whole spices used in making it throughout.  The one slight disappointment was the salty lassi, which was tooooo salty.  We did try a new flavor of lassi though that was excellent, pandan buko (the green drink).  It wasn't very sweet at all but had the luscious pandan flavor floating out of the drink powerfully.  This place rivals the best Indian we've ever had anywhere in the world.