Showing posts with label beer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beer. Show all posts

Friday, May 6, 2011

Beer Tastes Better at Baseball Games

We saw the Yokohama Bay Stars trounce the Honshin Tigers tonight. I usually travel to the Tokyo Dome to scratch my baseball itch but could not resist the chance to check out Yokohama Stadium when the Seventh Fleet proposed a group outing.

Getting to Yokohama Stadium from Yokosuka is easy.  You can either ride the Keikyu train to Yokohama and switch to a JR train that will take you to Kannai station or you can hop off the Keikyu train in Kamiooka and take the subway to Kannai.  The stadium is right across the street from the JR end of Kannai station.  If you exit the station at the subway end, you could end up walking two or three blocks.  A little exercise won't kill you. 

Ninjas?  No, those are Power Rangers celebrating a run.

We sat in the upper deck above first base. Walking up two flights of stairs to reach our seats, we found restrooms conveniently situated on the landing. I've missed a lot of innings over the years while waiting in long lines outside of ballpark restrooms, so I appreciated the architect's thoughtfulness in carving out facilities just for us Section 8 fans.

There's the Sapporo Beer Girl!  We'll take two, kudasai!
Just like at the Tokyo Dome, cute young girls scampered up and down the aisles offering four kinds of beer, whiskey, and chu-hi. The Tokyo Dome beer girls carry their beer in little keg backpacks but the ones in Yokohama poured beer from cans. We sampled Asahi, Sapporo, Kirin, and Yebisu beer. My favorite, Yebisu, cost 50 yen more than the others but I consider it seventy cents well spent.

I'm going to try to visit more ballparks this summer and next spring. For research purposes, of course.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Yebisu Beer Museum: An Excruciatingly Detailed Account

"Where to next, Mother Dearest?"

"The Yebisu Beer Museum, Eldest Son.  We'll ride the subway to the Ebisu station, stow our bags and backpacks in one of the convenient lockers, find a place to eat lunch, then ride a series of moving sidewalks through the station to get to the museum."

Those moving sidewalks took us to an exit south of the station, across the street from an enormous plaza flanked by new buildings that framed a view of what looked to be a French palace.  We saw a Sapporo beer hall off to our right but forced ourselves to turn left toward a bakery which we also managed to ignore.  The museum was hidden behind the Mikoshi department store, down a brick ramp.


The beer museum opened quite recently -- within the past couple of years -- and is remarkably posh.  I had the distinct impression those Yebisu people feel downright reverential about their product, and rightly so.  It's my favorite Japanese beer.

Presenting myself at the sleek information desk, I requested four tickets for the next guided tour.  The nice lady explained that the tour is conducted in Japanese only.  I told her we didn't mind.  Our motivation, as you have already surmised, was the two glasses each of Yebisu beer the guide would pour for us at the end of the tour.  The tour fee was 500 Yen, roughly $5.40, while two Japanese beers at our hotel would set us back about $15.  My mother, as she was fond of reminding us at regular intervals, did not raise any dummies (the grammatical error was her idea of a joke).


Clutching their tickets, the four Americans joined three Japanese tourists in the spacious waiting area.  Our guide, clad in a crisp uniform of course, met us there and escorted us around the corner into a small gallery.  She dimmed the lights.  We plastered appropriately reverential expressions on our faces (really, I cannot say enough good things about Emily - her instincts could not have been better if she'd been raised by my mother). 

The guide went through her spiel, inching us ve-e-e-ry slowly from one artifact to the next.  My heart skipped a beat when I spotted English subtitles on some of the exhibits.  I was trying to edge over close enough to read them without disrupting the tour when the guide, screwing up her courage I'm sure, elected to play to the majority of her audience by practicing her English.  She pointed to a portrait of Yebisu's distinguished founder and posed a question.  Oh, no!  Not the dreaded audience participation moment, the bane of a shy and/or half-deaf person's existence! 

"Is she talking to me?"  "Yes, yeah, yup," whispered the cowardly liars in their version of unison.  Drat.  "She wants to know which American president that man resembles."  Double drat.  So much for reading the English subtitles but I suppose that gives me a good excuse to make another trip to the museum for a self-guided tour.  (The correct answer was George Bush.  I thought the man looked like George Washington.)

Despair not.  I picked up a few kernels of information by enlarging some of the photographs I snapped in the exhibit gallery.  The cost of a beer in 1904, for example was 20 sen, ten times the cost of a bowl of soba noodles (note how eloquently this information is underscored visually).  Beer was something the common people could merely "gaze at longingly in shop windows" until the economic boom of the 1960s.  And here's something of potential minor interest to my brother Dave but no one else:  in 1994 the theme music from "The Third Man" was used in a successful ad campaign and henceforce became famous in Japan as the "Yebisu Song."

On to our reward:  the tasting room.  The beer that flowed out of that red tap over Emily's right shoulder was especially noteworthy but, alas, is only available on tap.  I know this because I asked which in and of itself ought to tell most of you how good that beer tasted.

We learned how to pour a proper beer with a creamy foam head extending at least an inch above the glass, exactly the opposite of how I was taught to pour a beer during my brief barmaid career at Lizard's Bar and Grill in East Lansing, Michigan.

We learned that the lacy patterns a Yebisu beer leaves inside a glass are cause for reflection and admiration.

One of us paced himself by photographing his beer between every sip/gulp.

One of us, pictured here with the Yebisu mascot, did not pace herself and learned that she should never again wear a sleeveless top or that particular shade of pink.

Next:  Adios to the Texans!

Friday, July 23, 2010

The Fog Lifts

Whoosh!  Is that the Summer of 2010 flashing by?

The Ancient Mariner was home long enough to see his youngest son graduate, turn 18, climb Mt. Fuji, and learn to ride a bike. Now he is back on the Seven Seas, scanning the horizon for a tiny island that Dr. T and I have as yet been unable to locate in an atlas.

James and Emily took to Japan like armadillos to Texas asphalt. We ate our way up, down, and across the Miura Peninsula while Matt endured umpteen graduation rehearsals. Between meals we checked out a few shrines, temples, and the Yebisu Brewery. (With two Japanese brewery tours under her belt, Suzi is already talking about making a third trip to Japan next spring so we can hit the Asahi headquarters in Tokyo and Sapporo in Hokkaido. We're such a cultured family.)

Speaking of Suzi, Matt's devoted aunt brought the Best Graduation Gift Ever from all the cousins, uncles, and aunts:  a scrapbook holding letters and photographs of two Flat Stanleys and their pal Flat Arthur cavorting with Matt's cousins, uncles, and aunts. We all had quite a chuckle seeing Flat Stanley riding with the Border Patrol in Arizona, visiting Grandpa's favorite watering hole in Michigan, bouncing on a trampoline with Will, being devoured by David and Erin's dog, and painting an appropriately pious expression on his face when Uncle Tom and Aunt Betsy took him to church in Miami.  (Clever families are so much more fun than cultured ones.  One assumes.)


While Emily, James, and Suzi were recovering from jet lag, Kate was on bridesmaid duty in New Hampshire. She got to Japan in time to see her little brother meander to the podium at the Yokosuka Arts Theatre to introduce his class salutatorians.

 The slightly biased family members (plus Emily, a refreshingly agreeable young lady) agreed that the introduction was delivered with more poise and better diction than any other address that evening.  You can trust us on this as we're a rather critical -- whoops, I mean discerning -- audience.

Next:  Family Day in Kamakura

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Emergencies Only Happen During Deployments

We spent the past few days gearing up for another semi-long deployment. Matt practiced asking "What's for dinner?" in a desperate tone of voice, Mike calculated our taxes, and the Queen of Multi-tasking read three books between alphabetizing the spices and folding thirteen loads of laundry.

This time around Mike will miss Matt's entire track season and his first appearance on stage since his 1999 turn as an orange peel. None of us are complaining. We know we have it easier than most Navy families, especially the ones with small children. Just this morning, as we were saying goodbye to each other, Mike and I noted that the mind-numbing routine and loneliness that plagued earlier deployments are no longer issues for me. Between Dr. T, Reiko, the Knitwits and Oakleaf knitters, Shonan Ladies, Oakleaf Explorers, and the Japanese and American Wives group, I am awash in opportunities to engage in adult conversation these days.

Before the USS Blue Ridge had left the pier this morning, I was already on a train bound for the Kirin Brewery in Yokohama. I heard shouts of "Kathy! Kathy!" as I raced up the escalator and executed a rather elegant scissor-kick leap into the nearest car just as the door was closing. My nonchalant glance around the car came up empty in the familiar face department. That would be because the rest of my party was standing on the platform gaping at me as the train gathered speed. Whoops!

Not to worry. I hopped off at the next station where I hooked up with Yuko, we jumped on the next train together, and everyone else was waiting for us on the platform in Yokohama. By eleven we had completed the brewery tour and were ensconced in the tasting room. "Hey, hey, hey," said Mimi. "I can't mix beer with the medicine I'm taking. Do you want mine?" "Gosh, maybe I should force myself to drink your 12-ounce Kirin and that little shot glass of Zero Kirin in addition to my ration so you won't cause some sort of terrible international incident." I did my diplomatic duty while Mimi tried in vain to figure out who was trying to reach her on her cell phone.

Someone with four brothers got a lot of Christmas shopping done in the Kirin Brewery gift shop before posing with some of her friends. (Mimi is not in this picture because she was still trying to solve The Cell Phone Mystery.)

Back in Yokosuka - after a detour to Aoki Bakery where I left my best umbrella and Stone Cold Sober Mimi left her Kirin Brewery gift shop purchases - I had already changed into my jeans when the telephone rang. "It's Mimi. Remember that call I got at the brewery? It was the school. Matt had an accident, they couldn't find you, and were calling me as your emergency contact person." "Uh-oh."

I checked my messages and, sure enough, the school nurse had left her number. Her line was busy so I headed to the school where I found Matt stretched out in the nurse's office. He had fallen backwards down a short flight of cement steps and scraped his back and arm. He got up and, according to his friends, might have hit his head when he fell a second time and blacked out for about ten seconds. His teacher/track coach sent him to the nurse's office where he vomited a couple of times during the course of the afternoon. The nurse said I could take him home but as I was pulling into the carport Matt decided he ought to see a doctor about his headache.

So off we went to the emergency department where he assured a nurse and corpsman that he was not a victim of domestic violence (whew!). The doctor asked me to check Matt's shot record and I made a note of that on the only paper I could find in my purse, the Kirin Brewery pamphlet, which I'm sure made a swell impression. A CT scan showed that Matt did not have a concussion so we were sent home with three pages of instructions. I gave him a couple of Tylenol and I'm pretty sure he's feeling much better because he just wandered into my room and asked in a rather annoying and quite desperate tone of voice, "What's for dinner?"

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