I enjoyed meeting my friend Tony Laszlo for lunch in Hiroo last week when I made a run down there for a month’s supply of Norwegian goat cheese. A grocery store there that tends to the families of the many embassies in the area (including the Norwegian one) sells the big full size blocks of the toxic brown substance I love to cover my sandwiches with. Although our lunch of tea-flavored gruel was no match for a post-lunch snack combination of his rye bread and my cheese, we enjoyed a good talk in the park at Hiroo. We also stopped by the Tokyo Metropolitan Library which has its central branch in the park. I love this library and used to hang out there when I was studying Japanese in Yokohama years ago. Apparently they have wireless access in the library now, but I think you need an account with some commercial service. Also, I’m told they have a lot of materials in their closed stacks which you would normally only find at the Diet Library. So if there is anyone who is tired of the lines and hassle there, you might want to try the library in Hiroo, with its view over the park, as an alternative. Tony and I happened to get there while the cherry trees were blossoming outside. Today the blossoms have mostly fallen, covering much of Tokyo’s concrete in a thin blanket of pink petals.
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{ 2 } Comments
That Norwegian goat cheese is probably the strongest cheese I have ever had. It sure is good, though. Mitch’s mom keeps huge kilo blocks of the stuff in the fridge, at least when Mitch is at home. It’s really good on those Norwegian whole-wheat crackers that his mom also keeps around the house.
Also, I have to agree that the park in Hiroo is very nice. Since I got married in the Mormon Temple in Tokyo which is right next to the park (and literally 30 seconds from the Norwegian embassy, I thought that was interesting) my wife and I have always liked that park. When my family came to Japan for our wedding, we took them to a combini, bought some bentos, and had lunch in the park. We figured that was as good of a way to give them a taste of Japan in a short period of time as anything!
Wow Derek, that we never met in Hiroo when you were there. Thanks as always for stopping in. I hope we see each other soon, in the US or in Japan…
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