Nanzenji and Heian Shrine, Kyoto
Pentax Espio Mini / Fuji Industrial 400
Pentax Espio Mini / Fuji Industrial 400
The train to Nikko and some munch near the station.
Nikon F100 / Fuji Industrial 100
The indeterminate puck of fried matter I’m holding in my wizened, withered, weather-beaten mit is actually yuba manju. It’s deep fried, salted tofu skin (yuba) filled with sweet red bean paste (manju). We bought these tasty morsels from Sakaeya (さかえや) a little shop on the corner of the square over the road from the train station where the buses pull in.
I’ve since learnt that this shop is somewhat famous for these snacks and that yuba is actually a local delicacy. We were served by a delightful young lady of no more than seventy years of age who skilfully willed me into buying not one, but several of these modest but immensely flavourful snackettes and I’m so glad she did because we did something downright touristy and didn’t even realise it at the time. We had a jolly nice time as we waited for the bus all thanks to the charm and charisma of an elderly and rather attractive yuba manju lady.
You’ll definitely want to be like us and go there so here’s some info-goodness for you.
http://nikkosakaeya.co.jp/shop/
To get to Nikko from Shinjuku we took the subway from Higashi-Shinjuku to Shinjuku station (¥140) and then from Shinjuku, the Chuo line to Ueno (JR Pass). The “Yamabito” Shinkansen took us to Utsunomiya in about 50 minutes and at Utsunomiya we changed to the local Nikko line (pictured).
This is Lai Tak Tsuen (勵德邨) a public Housing estate in Causeway Bay. The building in the pitchas is Lai Kit Lau (勵潔樓). The buildings are famous for their circular design and were featured in the the 2017 movie Ghost in the Shell.
The city of Hong Kong inspired Director Mamoru Oshii’s vision of the year 2029-set city in the original 1995 Japanese animation. Lai Tak Tsuen as well as several other locations and landmarks (including the circular over-pass I was standing on when I took the first pitcha) were featured in both films.
Hasselblad 500 C/M / Fuji Superia 100 [Expired 05 / 2006]
Cricket is the World’s greatest game. The pillar upon which modern civilisation is built, it is the last bastion of democracy, equality, fair play and sportsmanship. Well, that’s what I think anyway. I really love cricket.
Taken upon the hallowed turf of Broadhalfpenny Down Cricket Club. (The Birthplace of Modern Cricket) This makes my village the birthplace of modern civilisation.
Mamiya C220 / Fujifilm Pro 400H
Nikon F100 / Fuji Proplus II 200