Showing posts with label ラーメン (Ramen). Show all posts
Showing posts with label ラーメン (Ramen). Show all posts

Thursday, February 11, 2021

Farewell, My Wonderful Japan Bash

So long, and farewell.

The last post was over three years ago. The last post that I actually put some thought into was even further back in time, in 2016. It's quite obvious that this blog is no longer something I think about. And though I will keep the domain name registered for shits and giggles, I have a feeling the site is about to implode.

You see, I hosted all the photos on a website called Flickr. In the past, it was around $10 a year for a pro account. Then they sold the company. The new owners raised the price. While I redesigned www.ramenadventures.com into a new, non-Flicker-using portal for all things ramen, Japan Bash remains tied to this service.

I canceled it in February 2021. There is a large possibility that the 21,000 photos stored on their servers will disappear. 

I started Gaijin Bash (the original name) in 2006 when I moved from San Francisco, California, USA to Japan. I guess you could e-stalk me by starting at that first post.

So thank you for the views. In total 243,000 people viewed this site from the first post in 2006. I made around $500 in adsense revenue, though I think that is also including money from Ramen Adventures, which is kind of depressing considering that the site has many millions of views. Looking back, I think I did the blog thing incorrectly. I had friends who claimed their blogs were making real money. Blogs about things much less SEO friendly than ramen.

The most popular post was my Teaching in Japan writeup. I hope this post was genuinely useful to people. It was meant to be.

Keep in touch. I'm on every social media platform I can think of @ramenadventures. Look me up. YouTube, Instagram, Twitter, FaceBook, Twitch, Discord, Clubhouse. Sorry, no Mixi.

I'm Brian, and this was Japan Bash.



Tuesday, March 01, 2016

February, 2016

2月

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Meanwhile, somewhere in France. Yep, that's my book on the shelf of a soon-to-be-opened ramen shop in Paris. Amazing.

And speaking of my book . . .

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I guess now is as good as anytime to announce that I was given an offer to write another one. While the last one was about Tokyo ramen shops, this next one will be more about ramen and travels around Japan. As you can see from above, I've been having trouble getting words onto paper.

Speaking of books about ramen . . .

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My friend Amy Kimoto-Kahn published her first book! Even if you don't cook, check this one out for the amazing photos and stories. Buy it here!

Speaking of friends . . .

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I took my friend and his daughter to Kawaii Monster Cafe. I kinda wanted to go, and this presented the perfect opportunity. While she had cake, we drank cocktails.

Speaking of sake . . .

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Did you try it?

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They actually contain 0.8% alcohol, and have a slight aroma of Japanese sake.

Speaking of real sake . . .

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Craft Sake Week was fun.

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Speaking of booze . . .

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Speaking of Star Wars . . .

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Speaking of stars . . .

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Still shooting ramen videos for the show Tokyo Extra. We are on air every Sunday night on TBS in Japan, along with a YouTube livestream. Or you can just check out the individual ramen videos online. If you are into YouTube, I'd appreciate all the likes, comments, and subscribes that you can spare.



Speaking of  . . . extra . . .

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How about some extra old steaks?

Speaking of extra old . . .

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Had a nice haikyo hunt with the usual suspects. For about $20 in gas and food, we spent a day visiting real-life history that has been all but forgotten. Add to that some awesome roads and great ramen, and you have what life is all about.

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I always wondered what I would do if I found some money at one of these modern ruins. Well, we hit pay dirt!

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Speaking of dirt . .

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Anything for that perfect shot!

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Okinawa Ramen Riding

沖縄- Okinawa

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I had work on a Saturday down in Okinawa. Of course, I took a few days off to get down there early for some R&R. R&R, isn't that what the military guys say? Seriously, there is a big, scary military presence down in Okinawa. But was I down there for the burgers and Filipino girly bars that line the roads outside the ominous barbed wire fences surrounding our service men? No way, I'm here to eat noodles and ride bikes.

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This was my first time to Okinawa, and now I've been to all 47 prefectures of Japan. I think, for the traveler, Okinawa has a lot to offer if you have the time. Apart from the main island and Naha, accounts of amazing seaside villages and tranquility abound. But, I didn't have the time. A quick, two day blast on a rented Kawasaku Z800 would have to do.

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But first, airport sushi! The sushi at Terminal 1 is much better than this one at Terminal 2.

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A rental from Rental 819, the country-wide bike rental company we know and love. I was thinking of a cruiser, maybe a Honda Shadow 400, but this sporty beast was the same price. How was the ride? Maybe if you are more of a Japanese-sized guy, you'd enjoy it more. That seat felt small, and it was rock hard to boot. But the power to weight was awesome, and the torque was there at any speed. I wonder how it compares to a KTM Duke 690?

Anyways, if you are interested in getting a Z800, make sure you test ride it for a day first. I couldn't do more than 80km before my ass was sore.

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Ramen! I hit up 1 ramen shop and 2 sokisoba (Okinawan style noodles) shops this trip. The reviews will be up later at www.ramenadventures.com.

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My pension for the night. $40 and I woke up to this view. Not bad, except the Motobu area was completely dead. I managed to find the only friendly looking place to drink on the other side of that bridge.

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Okinawan Awomori (泡盛) is prevalent.

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The, one full day of riding and sightseeing.

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I'd say skip the Okinawa aquarium. Yeah, it is super famous, but apart from the whale sharks, it was kind of small. Actually, I had just recently visited the Atlanta aquarium, which supplanted the Okinawan one as the biggest tank in the world. I think. The Atlanta one had jellyfish and a dolphin show that was more of an off-broadway production.

The above photo is from Okinawa, and below is from Atlanta. I think the same company built the massive acrylic windows.

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Almost everything with a sign seems touristy. I veered off the main road to check out a waterfall, but they wanted 500 yen to see it. Further north, a cliff with a view was charging 870 yen for a look. I don't even know what this Okinawa Fruits Land is, but it was another 1000 yen.

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Motobu is known as THE place to go for sokisoba, the Okinawan cousin to ramen.

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山原そば.

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Great soup and noodles. The meat was a little tough, but you can't beat the above bowl for 600 yen.

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Another famous spot. きしもと食堂.

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Their toppings were amazing, but the noodles were on the soft side. Everyone's a critic!

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What a place. The north side had plenty of positively empty roads. I only passed one driver in about an hour, who just so happened to be the drunkest drunk driver I had ever seen in my life. This was at noon on a Friday. I contemplated being a snitch and telling a cop, but there were also no buildings for an hour.

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I guess November is the off season. Though it was almost 30 degrees out, I had this resort beach all to myself for the sunset.

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And I didn't even get kicked out for my tattoos! Also, what is that guy's ink of? A tribal butterfly crab?

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See you again, next time my work sends me down.

Friday, May 30, 2014

japanbash.com is now japanbash.co

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I was having trouble renewing my domain name, japanbash.com, though the Blogger system. I tried many times, but in the end I was just lazy and let it expire. I also thought that if I let it expire, I could just re-register it through GoDaddy, which is where I have my other domains.

Anyways . . .

The minute it expired, some company swooped on it. I guess that is something that happens a lot.

So now the .com is a .co

Here is a photo of ramen:

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If anyone knows how I should try and get japanbash.com back, let me know. I do't want to spend much money, and I think the URL is pretty much worthless from a financial standpoint.

Sunday, December 29, 2013

My New YouTube Channel x Yummy Japan!

I've recently teamed up with Yummy Japan to make a series of ramen videos. If you are interested in checking them out, please do! Please subscribe:




Hey, and even if you could care less about ramen, please subscribe:




It's my Christmas wish dammit!



Welcome to Yummy Japan - We broadcast food culture.

Yummy Japan is making B-Kyu food videos for Japan. You can head to the main YouTube site for a list of all the videos (https://www.youtube.com/user/YummyJpn). The ones in frequent rotation are:

  • My ramen shiznit
  • A designer named Hot Harada eating mega spicy food and sweating a lot
  • This American dude and French chick who crush mega-sized meals
  • French and Colombian girls eating and drinking at izakayas
  • A super genki girl making character-bentos 
  • A gravia idol speaking on yaki-niku
  • This crazy Iranian guy who eats donburi and loses his mind

Thanks for checking it out and sharing! Have a great New Year holiday!

Friday, June 04, 2010

Epic Motorcycle Riding in Kyushu

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The Yamanami Highway runs from Yufuin, just outside Beppu, down to volcanic Mt. Aso. You should buy a motorcycle and go here.

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Sweeping curves, light traffic, and tons of nature. What's not to love?

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My CouchSurfing host joined me on the back. A seasoned rider back in Vietnam, at least that's what she told me, she later said it was the first time she had ever gone faster than 100kmph.

Our first rest stop was the onsen / rich people resort of Yufuin. Yufuin was... the fuck is this?!?

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A minute after white turd ice cream, came across this.

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Holy shit Himari-chan, thanks for the nightmares!

Anyways, Yufuin is kind of saturated with tourist attractions, and I didn't want to stick around.

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Speaking of tourist attractions, The Kokonoe "Yume" Otsurihashi Bridge 九重“夢”大つ橋 is the biggest something or other in Japan. It's only 5 bucks, so check it out if you have time. I had time.

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Further south, Mt. Aso is known by Japanese people as being a spot that is famous for milk and other dairy goods. I later found out that it's famous for both riding, and eating, horses.

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Sexy bike!

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Imagine speeding over mountain passes, volcanic steam vents spitting into the air around you.

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Eventually, you'll arrive at Mt. Aso. It's active!

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The gasses are all kind of poisonous, and you might have problems if you are asthmatic.

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Nice landscape. A lot of people asked me if I saw the green Aso. I guess the slopes have some vegetation for a shot time during the year. I dunno. No green today.

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If the slashing light turns red... run!

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My map recommended an utaseyu (うたせ湯) onsen. The tallest one in Japan. I finally figured out what it was when I went in. The falling stream of hot water gives you a massage. Nice!

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If you're hungry, don't worry, maps to the rescue. Touring Mapple X Dream Burger (?).

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I totally found this map to local shops that have hamburgers. Remember, this is fairly remote mountain country. There is no logical explanation.

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Tasty though.

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Not as tasty as ramen.

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Anyways... here's my "wish you were here" shot.

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By the way, this area is one of Japan's motorcycle mecca places. I had just missed a huge Harley event, which was too bad. Ask your local bike shop, if it's a major holiday, there might be something going on-