The main components of this area's dining scene are as follows: grilled meat (Korean abounds; guts specialists are also common), grilled chicken, 'picture' izakayas (so called because they have menus out front with copious pictures - to me this is a bad sign for an izakaya because it means they can't change the menu much), sushi (a Japanese delicacy wherein a slice of raw fish is placed atop warm, vinegared rice) and nice izakayas. We went to one of the nice izakayas.

It being a casual weeknight, we didn't order more than...wait, I think we ordered a lot. Naturally there was fish to start - good pickled mackerel, excellent errrr...shima-aji (another kind of mackerel, but totally different). Lightly pickled 'water eggplants' are a favorite of mine - they're wetter and more crisp than regular eggplant, so they're nice to eat with a day of pickling in them. As a grilled course (this sounds very official, but really it was all a jumble), we had cherry tomatoes wrapped in bacon and stuck on bamboo skewers - hard to go wrong with grilled bacon. I could tell that this wasn't the best bacon ever, and I didn't care. Grilled bacon basically ranges in quality from 'great' to 'awesome' - hard to go wrong.
One fried thing was the aforementioned 'tubular fish cake' (you may know it as chikuwa or even 竹輪 if you're weird) stuffed with spicy cod roe before being tempura-battered and fried - a cool idea, very tasty in practice. You could get away with serving this at a much more elegant place. Another fried thing was baby octopus, fried chicken style (don't knock this until you try it - I actually think a well-stewed octopus tastes a bit like chicken, so the taste also really lends itself to frying). Again, you might call this いい蛸の唐揚, if you were trying to remember more useless party-trick kanji.
I'ma kick Yuasa, you don' shut up.
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