The restaurant behind the tree is the place. View Larger Map.
I am not sure exactly of the name of the place. But I love the sauce. And well, everything. Would come back here again. It takes a lot, though, to eat enough (i.e. it was a little bit expensive -- and you have to do the cooking yourselves). It might be better to go to this other
yakiniku restaurant downtown, called
Fuu Fuu Tei, which has eat-all-you-can
yakiniku / 焼肉 / やきにく / grilled meat.
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Their special sauce. Looks like what we call in the Philippines as "sarsa,"
and more particularly "sarsa ng lechon," except this might also have some
sesame and miso added. |
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The grilling pot with charcoal. I forgot how this is called! |
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We had shirokoro / シロコロ / pork intestines, or "isaw" as
we call them in the Philippines, and 豚タン / buta tan, where buta = pork,
and tan = tongue. |
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And then there's buta nankotsu which is soft pork bone, and pork kalbi and
beef kalbi. |
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Yasai yaki / 野菜焼 / grilled veggies, the happy kind. |
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And finally we had tori momo / とりもも / chicken breast, chorisoo / チョリソー /
chorizo, and hatsu / ハツ / hearts? It's pork heart actually. And, it's quite good.
As you know, hearts are all muscle; i.e. all meat. |
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