Showing posts with label Japans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japans. Show all posts

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Japan's frilly 'maids ' go grey

Tokyo--Japan's famed "maid cafes" featuring coy young girls serving tea in frilly aprons and bonnets have been given a new twist--a cafe or unsmiling, grim-faced grannies reflecting a fast-greying nation.

Tokyo's Ikebukuro district now boasts Cafe Rotten meier, named after the disciplinary housekeeper in the hit 1970s anime series Heidi, Girl of the Alps, and has been drawing some 500 customers daily on weekends.

Patrons are greeted with a terse "welcome home" by an unsmiling Fraulein Rotten meier lookalike before being scolded for slouching in chairs or for not removing their coats in the cafe's warm, cosy environs.

There are 30 "Rotten meiers" who work shifts, including students, office workers and retired real-life grannies. Although the "grannies" range from 24 to 77 years old--with the younger matriarchs sporting heavy makeup to look old--the woman behind the concept says she is making a statement on societal pressures to stay young.

"Pressure on people to stay young is too heavy. It's unnatural. I think people are exhausted under too much pressure, anti-ageing "43 year-old artist Miwa Yanagi told AFP.
AFP PHOTO / Kazuhiro Nogi

Especially in a country that is rapidly greying, with one of the world's lowest birthrates or 1.3 children per woman taking a dwindling population even lower, helping deflate an already sagging economy.

The average age of Japan's farmers, for example, is 66.

But Yanagi also sees Japan's elsewhere as a cause for celebration.

"Japan is the world's greatest nation of grannies," she said, a reference to the nation's average life expectancy of about 85 for women, the world's highest.

Yet despite this, Japan "worships young women", Yanagi said. "It loves young women, as you can see in maid cafes or images of women in subculture. Why can't there be a grannies ' cafe? "

The grannies, selected from some 50 applicants through an audition, were enjoying being old as much as clients seemed to be enjoying being disciplined said Naomi Akamatsu, a 42-year-old actress wearing fake some wrinkles.

"Young boys and girls nowadays long to be scolded," she said of the concept, which Yanagi says demonstrates the need for strong elsewhere in a nation of small, two-generation families.

1 2 Next >

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

More Stars for Japan's Culinary Crown

TOKYO — According to the latest guide from restaurant referee Michelin, the new global champion in three-star dining is …Kansai.


The Michelin guidebook to be released Friday for Kansai, the Japanese region that encompasses Kyoto, Osaka and Kobe, awards its coveted three-star rating to 12 restaurants — a culinary antidote to Japan's economic fortunes and largely sagging sclerotic policy making.


Kyoto and Osaka had seven three-star restaurants in the 2010 guide.The latest guide added Kobe restaurants, and an additional five top ratings.


That edges the region fits reigning champion Tokyo (11 three-star restaurants) and places it well above Western dining capitals Paris (10 top-rated restaurants), New York (five) and London (two).


When the French tire maker debuted its Tokyo guide in 2008, it stars on Tokyo bestowed more than any other city in the world, spurring controversy.


For all of Japan's economic woes and its diminished presence on the global stage, the country's food culture has never been more widespread. There is a sushi counter inside the Wal-Mart Supercenter in Plano, Texas. And from Manhattan to Moscow to Bangkok, the repertoire of Japanese cuisine has outgrown sushi: Yakitori (grilled chicken on a skewer), Windows (noodles in broth), and soba (buckwheat noodles) restaurants are legion.


Though more than a decade of deflation has certainly lowered the cost of eating out in Japan — a simple gyudon, or beef bowl, costs just 280 yen (about $ 3.50) today — it hasn't curbed the country's collective appetite.


The Japanese are among the world's most devoted foodies.


Television shows featuring food seem to loop endlessly on Japan's major networks, with telegenic young women holding up quivering sea urchin or a glistening red slab of fresh tuna between their chopsticks before devouring it.Then they open their eyes wide and utter the most overused adjective in the Japanese vocabulary: "Oishii!"("Delicious!")


"Gastronomy is vibrant here," said Jean-Luc Naret, director of the Michelin guides, in an interview.


"There are 160,000 restaurants in Tokyo and 15,000 in Paris," he added when asked if Michelin had been too generous with its ratings in Japan.


When the Japan guide debuted, critics accused Michelin's mostly Western inspectors or being too generous out of a lack of understanding of Japanese food. Mr. Naret said that now all seven inspectors in Japan are Japanese.


The government is busy figuring out ways to monetize the country's growing cultural clout. This summer, Japan's government established a Cool Japan office to promote fashion, food and tourism.

Newscom Michelin Guide director Jean-Luc Naret displays the new Kansai regional guide in Kobe, Japan, on Tuesday.

The number of Japanese restaurants around the world has exploded over the past decade.There were 24,000 Japanese restaurants globally in 2006, the last year figures were tallied, according to Japan's ministry of agriculture.In North America, the number of Japanese restaurants doubled to 10,000 in the decade from 1996 to 2006.In the same period, the number of Japanese restaurants in China also swelled.


"I think on the whole it's a good thing — Michelin is taking Japanese chefs seriously and giving them international recognition," said Mark Robinson, the author of "Izakaya: The Japanese Pub Cookbook."


"But a lot of people [in Japan] think that Michelin doesn't have any business judging them," he said.


Kyoto is renowned for its kaiseki cuisine — a multicourse tasting menu whose roots go back almost 500 years — and the proud purveyors of the tradition, passed down for generations within families.It is a closed, rarefied world and one where outsiders aren't always welcomed.A handful of the restaurants included in the guide come without pictures.


"In Tokyo we have to ask twice [to get pictures]," said Mr. Naret."In Kyoto we have to ask three times.On the fourth, they will give us pictures. "