Japan’s first all-matcha ramen restaurant is now open in Kyoto【Photos】

Ramen Nishiki Sui has a very fitting name.

You could make an argument that ramen has passed up sushi as Japanese cuisine’s representative dish, and matcha green tea has long been the beverage with the most cultural significance in the country. So should you find yourself wanting to experience both of them at the same time, you’ll be happy to know that Japan’s first all-matcha ramen restaurant is now open.

Fittingly, this combination of two very Japanese elements that have become very popular overseas too is found in Kyoto, and specifically in its Gion geisha quarter. Ramen Nishiki Sui gets its name because it’s a new sister shop of the already established Ramen Nishiki, with the twist that every type of ramen on its menu has a matcha broth, and sui is a poetic way of saying “green” in Japanese.

Nishiki Sui, which first started serving customers late last fall, offers four kinds of ramen. Their flagship style, also called Sui (pictured above), has a creamy-textured broth made with matcha and tai (sea bream stock), for a rich flavor with a clean finish. The toppings are fancy too: a slice of teriyaki-grilled sea bream, strikingly color-contrasting bell pepper, and a fried enoki mushroom cluster dusted with parmesan cheese.

For extra complexity, there’s the Sho, made with sansho (a type of astringent Japanese pepper), bork belly, and edible flowers.

If you want a touch of stimulating tartness instead, there’s the Yuzu, with the flavor of the Japanese citrus fruit of the same name in the broth.

Finally, the Nishiki is a simple style reminiscent of the sea bream broth served at the main Nishiki ramen restaurant, but with the addition of matcha.

And while the portion size isn’t large enough to make a full meal out of, you can add a side order of Matcha Tsukimi Gohan, a green tea-enhanced reimagining of Japan’s tamagokakegohan, in which you crack a raw egg into a bowl of piping hot white rice so that the heat of the grains just barely cooks the egg.

▼ Extra portions of the pork and sea bream can also be ordered.

Nishiki Sui isn’t the first place in Japan to offer matcha ramen, it claims to be the first ramen restaurant in Japan to serve matcha broth exclusively, and between it’s unique concept, eye-catching visuals, and travel hot-spot location, it’s probably going to be a memorable experience for many visitors to Kyoto.

Restaurant information
Ramen Nishiki Sui / らーめん錦 翠
Address: Kyoto-fu, Kyoto-shi, Higashiyama-ku, Kiyomoto-cho 375-4, Sueyoshi-cho Ichibankoji
京都府京都市東山区清本町375−4 末吉町一番小路
Open 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m., 6 p.m.-9 p.m.
Closed Mondays
Instagram

Source, images: PR Times
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A robot joins the team at a fast-food restaurant, but in an unlikely city in northern Japan

OriHime arrives at a local Mos Burger to test the future of inclusive work.

For technological experiments, Morioka is probably not the first choice that people would think of—in fact, you’d be hard-pressed to find it within a list of the top 20 cities people would come up with. That’s not to say that there’s anything wrong with it. I used to live there myself and it’s a beautiful city with a stunning view of Mt. Iwate, but being tucked away in Iwate, one of Japan’s northernmost prefectures, it’s not exactly a tech hub or tourist hotspot.

▼ Mt. Iwate over the Kitakami River

Even so, between February 6 and February 20, a palm-sized robot named OriHime will be helping to serve smiles at a Mos Burger branch in Morioka. OriHime is a 23-centimeter (nine-inch) tall avatar robot operated remotely by people who have difficulty going out due to disabilities, caregiving responsibilities, or other circumstances. Through the robot, these operators are able to chat with customers, assist with orders, and offer friendly greetings, adding a little human charm to the lives of people who are being drowned in AI-this and AI-that.

It’s not OriHime’s first appearance, as it’s been around for years, and most often works in Tokyo’s Harajuku, but it’s the first time it will make its way to Iwate Prefecture. Previous short-term deployments in places like Fukuoka and Hokkaido proved to be popular, but those were at bustling locations that are popular with tourists, so innovative technology is not so unusual to see. However, this visit to Morioka marks a particularly important milestone in the implementation of avatar technology precisely because of its characteristics. It’s a fairly ordinary regional city, with an outflux of labor to more popular cities and an aging population, so if this new technology earns favorable reviews here, it proves that OriHime could potentially function almost anywhere.

The Morioka Mach Land store isn’t exactly located in the heart of the city either, being a 20-minute walk from the nearest train station (Aoyama Station), or about a 15-minute bus ride from Morioka Station. It’s clear that the targeted customers for this visit are not those who are seeking the novelty of a little human-powered robot, nor is it international visitors who are looking to marvel at Japan’s latest innovations, but the regular families and students that visit the nearby shops and amusement facilities, showing off how that remote work and inclusive technology can fit seamlessly into daily life.

On weekdays between 11:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m., the operators of Orihime will connect and interact with customers. From Monday to Wednesday, these will be Challenge Mates (the in-house term for members with disabilities) from Mos Shine, a subsidiary of Mos Burger’s parent company that is focused on inclusive employment. On Thursdays and Fridays, operators with disabilities from OriHime’s developer, OryLab, will take over.

It doesn’t just end there, as in the center of Morioka, within Parc Avenue Kawatoku department store, is Heralbony Isai Park, a cultural space known internationally for celebrating artists with disabilities. From February 6 to February 23, the location will play host to OryLab’s pop-up Avatar Robot Cafe Dawn ver. Beta in Morioka.

▼ Dawn’s permanent cafe in Tokyo

With a vision to solve humanity’s loneliness, together these projects hope to show that inclusive technology is not only limited to major cities, but can connect people no matter where they are.

Not everyone can get up to northern Japan in February to show their support for the project, but that doesn’t mean you will miss out on meeting OriHime, as you might be lucky to get a glimpse of it in its usual base in Mos Burger’s Harajuku Omotesando store (you can check the schedule on the store’s website). If instead, you’d like to join in the celebration of art without borders and disabilities, Heralbony Laboratory Ginza also has a gallery to peruse and products to purchase. Or you could pay a visit to Avatar Robot Cafe Dawn’s permanent location in Nihonbashi, Tokyo.

For some people, Morioka might be an odd choice, but a small robot is proving that the future of technology and human connections don’t only belong to the big cities.

Store information
Mos Burger Morioka Mach Land / モスバーガー盛岡マッハランド店
Address: Iwate-ken, Morioka-shi, Kamido 1-chome, 2-50
岩手県盛岡市上堂1丁目2-50
Open 8:00 a.m.–12:00 a.m
Website

Heralbony Isai Park / ヘラルボニー旗艦店 ISAI PARK
Address: Iwate-ken, Morioka-shi, Saien 1-10-1
岩手県盛岡市菜園1-10-1
Open: 10:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m.
Closed: Follows Parc Avenue Kawatoku’s schedule
Website

Related: Mos Burger Harajuku Omotesando Store, Heralbony Laboratory Ginza, OryLab
Source: PR Times

Top image: PR Times
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Ramen shop manager arrested for punching self in the face and pretending he was robbed

He should have punched harder and knocked some sense into himself.

They say times are especially tough in the ramen business, with steadily soaring food prices and an intensely competitive market that demands prices be kept low. But let’s not overlook one silent victim in all this: a would-be scam artist working in a ramen restaurant who could barely get away with skimming profit when there isn’t much to begin with. These desperate times have apparently called for some really desperate measures.

On 23 October, at about 9:40 in the evening, the 36-year-old manager of a Kumamoto Ramen Ikugen branch in Namegawa, Saitama Prefecture, called the 110 emergency police number and said he was robbed at knife point. When the police arrived, he told them that the robber jumped him right after closing time, punching him in the face and stealing roughly 670,000 yen (US$4,300) of the restaurant’s cash.

Saitama Prefectural Police launched an investigation, but as it progressed, they began to notice some irregularities. The biggest one was that at the time of the robbery, there were no other people fitting the assailant’s description on surveillance cameras anywhere in the surrounding area.

▼ There are said to be around 5,000,000 surveillance cameras across Japan.

Considering the possibility that this might still be the work of an exceptionally cunning thief, they cautiously began to look at other potential scenarios and turned their attention to the manager. An inspection of his smartphone revealed terms such as “staged robbery victim” in his search history. In light of that evidence, the man confessed and said he had embezzled the money to use for living expenses and playing the pseudo-gambling pinball game of pachinko. He also added that his facial injuries that night were the result of him punching himself in the face.

He was arrested for making a false emergency call and obstructing police duties on 29 January, and police are currently investigating the details of the embezzlement the man had admitted to before pressing charges. Meanwhile, readers of the news weren’t surprised he didn’t get away with his scheme in this age of widespread surveillance in urban areas.

“They always catch this. A kid I went to high school with tried the same thing at a part-time job and got busted.”
“That guy probably had some other embarrassing stuff in his history, too.”
“They got cameras everywhere these days. It’s crazy to try a stunt like that.”
“He was probably researching staged robberies during work hours, too.”
“I don’t like the idea of the police checking a victim’s search history.”
“I thought I remembered the name of that restaurant. It was profiled on a ramen YouTube channel a while ago!”
“I checked the place on Google, and it has really good reviews.”

One silver lining in all that is that the other, law-abiding folks at Kumamoto Ramen Ikugen are getting some great publicity and recognition for their fine culinary work. Perhaps this incident can serve as a reminder for all of us to visit our local restaurant and tell them we love their ramen, before their management goes wacky and starts punching themselves in the face.

Source: Saitama Shimbun, Hachima Kiko, Meiji.net
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Insert image: Pakutaso
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Huge Evangelion Unit-01 head appearing in lights in Japan to celebrate anime’s 30th anniversary

The Minato Mirai neighborhood is looking extra futuristic with Eva light-up and fireworks.

In the grand scheme of things, there really isn’t all that much Evangelion anime. There was the original anime TV series that ran for 26 episodes, which was followed by two theatrical features made largely of recycled footage. 1997 brought the in-hindsight ironically named The End of Evangelion film, and then there were the four anime movies collectively called the Rebuild of Evangelion, which wrapped up in 2021.

That’s a drop in the bucket compared to franchises like Dragon Ball, Pokémon, Demon Slayer, or Attack on Titan, but Eva remains one of the most influential anime ever made, a massive presence that, for three decades and counting, has been looming in the background of the Japanese animation world, and as of this weekend, Eva will be a massive presence looming in real-world Japan too.

As part of Evangelion’s 30th anniversary celebration the Minato Mirai district of Yokohama, half an hour south of downtown Tokyo, will be lit up for a special Eva illumination event. The harborside neighborhood already boasts some very futuristic-looking architecture, and it’ll be looking even more so with the arrival of the head of Eva Unit-01 to the light pattern of the Cosmo Clock, the gigantic Ferris wheel in the Cosmo World amusement park that’s become a symbol of Yokohama itself.

This part of Yokohama might look familiar to anime and video game fans, as a giant Poké Ball has also graced the Cosmo Clock, and the sailing ship-shaped Intercontinental Hotel across the street served as the screen for a Final Fantasy projection mapping display. Fans will have no trouble figuring out who the collaborative partner is for the Evangelion event, though, as buildings around the waterfront will be illuminated in the immediately recognizable purple-and-green color scheme of Unit-01.

Light-up dates vary by building, but they’ll all be sporting the Eva colors from February 6 until at least February 19, and the Unit-01 Ferris wheel pattern will appear through February 24, with the biomech’s head appearing on the hour and at thirty minutes after between 6 and 9:30 p.m. In addition, Minato Mirai’s five-minute fireworks show series, Night Flowers, will be lighting up the night sky in the character image colors of the Evangelion core cast on February 7 and 14, with the pyrotechnics going off at 7 p.m. from the Shinko Futo Pier.

And don’t worry, Minato Mirai is just a short subway ride from the Shin Yokohama neighborhood, where the Evangelion:30+ ; 30th Anniversary of Evangelion fan event will be hosting the Evangelion kabuki performance and screening the brand-new Eva short anime.

Source, images: Yokohama City Visitors Bureau
Evangelion ©Studio Khara
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Chocolate Totoro cream puffs and cakes coming to Japan’s Ghibli bakery for Valentine’s Day【Pics】

Totoro is looking sweeter than ever.

In Japan, you don’t need to be in love in order to love Valentine’s Day, since the day is as much about chocolate as it is romance. So regardless of whether or not you’ve found your soulmate, you can make some sweet Valentine’s memories with a special someone: Totoro.

Shirohige’s Cream Puff Factory, the Tokyo sweets shop run by relatives of Studio Ghibli co-founder Hayao Miyazaki, has revealed its lineup of special Valentine’s Day chocolate treats for this year. First up is the Small Totoro Pair Cake, a chocolate tart with a layer of creamy ganache at the bottom, above that a strawberry mousse with bits of strawberry mixed in, and then an enticingly shimmery chocolate glacage glaze. Sitting atop the cake is a happy Small Totoro couple made out of white an (sweet bean paste), accompanied by a chocolate ribbon that makes this both a mouthwatering and heartwarming gift, whether you’re presenting it to someone else or treating yourself.

While Shirohige’s illustrated diagrams are always cute, the actual tart is even more adorable.

As the bakery’s full name implies, though, cream puffs are Shirohige’s Cream Puff Factory’s flagship temptations. While they’re always shaped like Totoros, for Valentine’s day they’re getting a special, all-encompassing coating of chocolate.

Two types are on offer, with the milk chocolate-covered Totoro cream puff filled with ganache and orange caramel, and the white chocolate one containing strawberry ganache and berry gelee. They also each come with a pair of acorn-shaped cookies.

If you’re looking for something lighter, but still sweet, to nibble on, there’s a three-piece Totoro cookie set, with Totoros in both standard buttery and chocolate biscuit forms, plus a raspberry-flavored leaf cookie (that looks like some forest dweller has already taken a little bite out of it).

And speaking of cookies, Shirohige’s Catbus sandwich cookie is also getting chocolatey for Valentine’s Day, replacing its usual butter raisin filling for one of ganache made from a blend of two types of chocolate.

Cute as they are, none of these will break your wallet’s heart. At 1,000 yen (US$6.50), the tart is as pricey as they get, with Totoro cream puffs and Catbus cookies 850 yen and the Totoro cookie set 500 yen. If you want to spend bigger, though, Shirohige has a Valentine’s assortment of various baked confectionaries for 2,500 yen, though aside from the one Totoro cookie, they don’t have any anime aesthetics to them.

All of the items are available for preorder (either in-person or via phone, as explained here) as of February 4, with possible pickup dates of February 11-14 for the chocolate Totoro pair tart and chocolate Totoro cream puffs. The window is a little wider for the cookies and baked confectionary set, which can be picked up between February 7 and 14. Oh, and if your Valentine’s dessert schedule is already so full that you can’t fit one more treat in until late February at the earliest, don’t despair, because the chocolate Catbus cookie will be available at Shirohige’s Cream Puff Factory’s branch in Tokyo’s Kichijoji neighborhood through March 30.

Source: Shirohige’s Cream Puff Factory (1, 2)
Images: Shirohige’s Cream Puff Factory
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Act of Japanese kindness touches one man’s heart, provides hope for elevator etiquette

The fate of the first to board has long been a problem in Japan, but this could be the solution. 

A curious thing happens in elevators – once you’re in there, and someone who wants to board is about to miss the closing doors, you’re able to extend a gesture of kindness by pressing the “open” button so they’re able to catch the lift they otherwise would’ve missed.

In Japan, though, this act of kindness can work against you, because an unspoken rule of etiquette dicates that the person closest to the buttons is in charge of operating them for everyone, like some sort of unpaid staff attendant. That means when you let someone in after you, you’ll also be in charge of letting them out before you, as you hold the “open” button for others before stepping out of the elevator yourself.

▼ If you’re standing in front of this panel in Japan, you’re expected to press the open and close buttons as an act of courtesy towards others.

Generally, the lift operator is only mildly inconvenienced by this role, but there are times when it can be irritating. When you need to check out after staying on a high floor in a hotel, for example, you’re likely to find yourself holding the doors open for people who get on at lower floors, so by the time you reach the lobby the lift is so crowded you’ll be holding the doors open for everyone who gets out. That means you’ll be the last to line up and check out behind your fellow lift companions, despite being first in the elevator.

▼ What might be called the “fate of the first to board” is particularly painful in a hotel situation.

As a frequent hotel user, our reporter Masanuki Sunakoma has long pondered the inherent problems with lift etiquette, but has never been able to come up with any good solutions. The other day, though, something happened to him that that made him see the light…and it touched his heart as well.

The event occurred when Masanuki was using crutches due to a foot injury, and a friend of his drove him to Starbucks. After getting out at the parking lot, a car pulled in right behind them, and when a couple got out of the car and headed towards the coffeehouse, they naturally passed by Masanuki, who was moving slowly due to his impairment.

Masanuki didn’t mind – in fact, he was pleased that they’d passed him as he didn’t want to hold them up along the way. However, when he entered the store, he saw that the couple hadn’t gone straight to the register as expected. Instead, they were looking at tumblers and coffee beans in the general goods section near the entrance. As he glanced at them, they turned, bowed slightly, and said to him: “Please go ahead and order“.

The kindness of this couple took Masanuki by surprise, as he’d initially thought they were browsing the shelves for coffee beans. However, after they gestured for him to go ahead of them, they lined up behind him empty-handed, proving they were just lingering at the coffee beans, waiting for him to step through the doors so they could take their place behind him in line.

When Masanuki finished ordering, he turned and thanked the couple and when they went up to the register, the barista, who’d seen what had happened, smiled warmly at the couple as if to thank them for being so considerate to a fellow customer. It was as if this one small kind gesture rippled through the entire cafe, spreading warmth and kindness to everyone in the vicinity.

▼ Masanuki was so touched even his drink tasted more delicious.

This pleasant feeling was the complete opposite of Masanuki’s experiences in a hotel elevator, where he can’t help but feel slightly disgruntled whenever his lift companions queue ahead of him at reception. While he can’t hold it against them, it’s the way things happen, after all, here at Starbucks, this couple had not only seen him but made him feel seen – instead of taking advantage of his situation, or simply turning a blind eye to it, they acknowledged his place ahead of them in the queue and stepped aside to let him through.

Furthermore, the couple hadn’t made a big deal of things – instead of stopping in the parking lot or at the cash register, they held back and browsed in front of the merchandise, creating a cushion between them so he wouldn’t feel guilty or pressured by their actions. They made it seem natural and unfettered, in a way that acknowledged his situation without any sense of shame or pity.

▼ If only he could meet couples like this at the elevator.

While he’s conscious of the fact that this couple’s generosity was in large part due to his foot injury, Masanuki felt that this system of acknowledging the person ahead of you when the end goal is to queue, would work wonders for lifting everyone’s spirits in an elevator scenario. Though he admits it would be hard to put into practice, especially with a full elevator, if just one or two people considered the plight of a lift operator, especially in a hotel when everyone is taking the lift to queue, it could have a ripple effect that leads to more awareness of the “fate of the first to board” an elevator.

Starting with awareness is the first step on the path to change, so Masanuki plans to lead by example, vowing to step aside for the lift operator next time there’s a lineup at the end of the journey. And it’s all thanks to the kindness of the couple he met at Starbucks, whose simple actions have left an indelible glow in his heart. Even in a country where consideration for the group is everything, this couple showed there are new levels to how you can express kindness, and he will forever pass it on in their memory.

Photos ©SoraNews24
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Naruto jerseys coming to Major Leage Baseball theme nights, Hello Kitty to take over a field

The Brewers believe it!

There are all sorts of fighting skills that come in handy for ninja, from hand-to-hand combat to proficiency with throwing stars, explosives, or supernatural ninpo spells. But more than anything, the definitive shinobi talent is stealth. True ninja must be so adept at infiltration that they can suddenly appear anywhere, even where you’d least expect them…like at a Milwaukee Brewers baseball game.

We’ve still got a month-plus until the start of the 2026 MLB season, but the Brewers are already getting multi-hobby fans excited with the announcement of the team’s special theme nights for the year. If you’re a fan of the shonen shinobi saga, August 5 is the night you’ll want to circle on your calendar/ninja time-tracking scroll, since that’ll be Naruto Night, when the team will be giving away special Naruto Brewers jerseys!

The Naruto logo appears on the chest just below the left shoulder, and you get some stylish baseball and ninja iconography on the sleeves. The lower half of the shirt has layers of clouds rendered in the style of classical Japanese paintings in the Brewers’ navy blue-and-yellow team colors, and Naruto himself appears on the back.

▼ Under the normal MLB uniform family-name conventions, the back of the jersey should say “Uzumaki,” but they’re making an Ichiro-like exception for Naruto here.

Interestingly, the Brewers’ 6:40 p.m. home game on August 5 is against the Pittsburgh Pirates, who’d be a natural choice for fans of another shonen anime/manga mega-hit, One Piece to cheer for, but no collaboration between them has been announced.

While this isn’t the first time for Major League Baseball to join hands with a popular anime franchise, past partnerships have often involved teams/cities with higher media profiles, such as the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Miami Marlines have also announced that they’ll be holding a Naruto night too on May 22 when they take on the New York Mets, with a Naruto jersey of their own. So far only the Brewers have shown off their design, though, and they’re promising “anime-themed activations around the park” and a postgame laser show on August 5 as well.

That’s not the only Japanese pop culture event the Brewers have planned this summer, either, as August 19, when they face the Seattle Mariners, will be Hello Kitty Night.

“Hello Kitty is taking over American Family Field this summer,” the team says of its home stadium. “Fans can take home a Hello Kitty bobblehead with the purchase of a special Theme Night ticket and enjoy themed fun throughout the game in this adorable all-ages celebration.” And if it sounds a little startling to say that Hello Kitty is going to be “taking over” territory, remember that one of her personas is, after all, “Red Dragon Archfiend Hello Kitty.”

Tickets for the Brewers game can be reserved online here, and for the Marlins game here. Though not specifically mentioned in the American Family Field rules and regulations, it’s safe to assume that they will require Naruto fans to leave their real-world Flying Thunder God Kunai at home.

Sources: Twitter/@MLB, MLB (1, 2)
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