Food culture
Sake, shochu & beyond: a drinks guide
Sake (nihonshu)
Sake is brewed from rice. The grades to know: junmai (rich, pure-rice), ginjo and daiginjo (more polished, fruity and delicate). Served chilled, warm (kan) or at room temperature — ask the staff to match it to your meal.
Shochu
A distilled spirit from barley (mugi), sweet potato (imo) or rice (kome), stronger than sake, drunk on the rocks, with water, or with hot water in winter.
Highball & chuhai
Light and refreshing: the highball (whisky + soda) and chuhai (shochu + soda + fruit) are izakaya staples. Start, as locals do, with toriaezu nama — a draft beer to begin.
Non-alcoholic
Green tea (often free with a meal), roasted hojicha, barley mugicha, and whisked matcha with sweets. There are also good alcohol-free beers and sodas like ramune.
Etiquette
Pour for your companions, not your own glass; a small kanpai (“cheers”) starts the night. Drink responsibly — and note that alcohol matters for halal and some dietary choices.
Places we’ve confirmed
Andy's Shin Hinomoto
Daily fresh sashimi platters from Toyosu Market
A legendary fish izakaya tucked beneath the Yurakucho railway arches since 1946, run by Brit-owner Andy who hand-picks the catch at Toyosu Market each dawn.
- Pescatarian
- Business
- Casual
- Date
Gonpachi Nishiazabu
Daily stone-milled handmade soba, charcoal skewers, tempura
The towering wooden-beamed izakaya that inspired Kill Bill's House of Blue Leaves, where lantern light conjures an Edo-era warehouse over plates of fresh soba and charcoal skewers.
- Vegan
- Halal
- Date
- Business
Ginza Birdland
Charcoal skewers of prized Okukuji Shamo chicken; liver pâté
A former Michelin-starred yakitori counter beneath Ginza, grilling rare Okukuji Shamo chicken skewer by skewer.
- Date
- Business
