Food is king in Japan. You'd be hard pressed to walk down a city street without seeing a restaurant, shop or vending machine offering all sorts of weird and wonderful food. It's tasty, convenient and absolute paradise for food lovers.
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Sushi rolls at a Japanese department store |
Walking into a Japanese department store basement is like walking into a David Jones Foodhall on steroids. There are literally food stalls as far as the eye can see, selling cakes, fresh fruit and vegetables, ready-to-eat food, snack food on sticks, carefully packaged gift boxes of food - it seriously just goes on and on. The first time I saw one of these was in the tunnels of
Sapporo station and I was gobsmacked by the amount of food on offer (which turned out to be nothing compared to the huge department stores of Tokyo!)
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Fresh fruit at the department store |
I was keen to see the super expensive fresh fruit that I'd heard about in Japan, and yes, you can definitely buy 15 strawberries for 6680 yen (about $63AUD, or $4 a strawberry!)
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Money is no object when it comes to fresh fruit in gift boxes |
We also saw beautifully presented boxes of cherries at a cool 6480 yen per box (~$60AUD)... right next to the almost-tennis-ball-sized strawberries which were 1620 yen for two (~$15AUD).
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Fresh fish and seafood section in a Japanese department store |
Aside from the exquisitely packaged but expensive fruit, there was also other fresh food to be purchased. The meat section had prepackaged cuts of beef, pork and chicken, including the most incredibly marbled cuts of wagyu! The fish section offered lots of fresh fish and seafood to be taken home for cooking, including many types that I hadn't seen before.
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Fresh octopus, pre-packaged and ready to take home |
I was particularly surprised to see thinly sliced fugu sashimi available for purchase at department stores. Fugu isn't something I would eat anywhere except for a specialised fugu restaurant where I knew the chef was qualified and had knowledge on how to prepare it properly without poisoning me! I wasn't game enough to try it in a department store, but if you want to try fugu without going to a restaurant, just head to your local department store fish section.
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Fugu for sale at a Japanese department store |