Christmas FestiviTea at the Peninsula

(Do you like the title pun?) As part of my mini high tea movement, I decided to organise a Christmas Tea Party. I chose to have it at the Peninsula Hotel in Tokyo. Firstly, it’s my favourite hotel to do afternoon tea, (it’s the only venue where I have gone back to again) and it’s also in a great location – Yurakucho/Ginza area. They also happened to be offering a seasonal Christmas afternoon tea menu.

From High Tea in Tokyo

I made a really nice invitation (if I do say so myself) (see Exhibit A below) which I emailed out to some fellow afternoon-tea lovers. I made the invite by creating a collage of photos that I had taken the first time I ever went there for tea. Exhibit A: Christmas Invite (template)

From Christmas Tea at the Peninsula

Now what the Peninsula Hotel lacks in views (the Lobby Lounge is located on the ground floor) it makes up for in wonderful service. The Peninsula Hotel wins points on all criteria – location, decor, food, service and price. It’s hard to fault it.

From High Tea in Tokyo

The Special Peninsula Christmas Afternoon tea menu was as follows: THE PENINSULA CHRISTMAS AFTERNOON TEA Selection of finger sandwiches – Christmas roasted chicken and sautéed apple wrap roll – Toasted croque monsieur with prosciutto and gorgonzola cheese – Smoked salmon and cucumber tartar with dill sour cream – Mushroom, almond and walnut quiche Festive Sweets – Stollen – Chocolate log cake – Pistachio pound cake – Christmas strawberry short cake – Peninsula chestnut chocolate brownie – Ginger bread cookie Plain and raisin scones, clotted cream and organic jam Choice of Peninsula tea

From Christmas Tea at the Peninsula
From Christmas Tea at the Peninsula
From Christmas Tea at the Peninsula
From Christmas Tea at the Peninsula
From Christmas Tea at the Peninsula

There was a lot of food. I struggled to get through it and in fact, did not get through everything (which is a rarity for me). The set was 3600yen plus, 10% surcharge. This includes all of the above food and unlimited pots of an assortment of tea, and coffee.

From High Tea in Tokyo

We also got a glass of sparkling wine for an extra 1400yen. It is Christmas after all, and what’s Christmas without a little indulgence.

From Christmas Tea at the Peninsula

The Lobby Lounge was packed. Every table was taken, and there was a waiting queue to boot. I had booked for our group of 6 a few weeks in advance. Live piano music played Christmas songs in the background, and Christmas trees and wreath adorned the lounge area to set the festive mood. It was such a lovely girly day out, spent in the warmth of a beautiful hotel with Christmas treats and endless pots of tea. Again, spreading the love one cup of tea at a time. Even my friend Yu-chan from Fukushima came down to Tokyo for the weekend.

From High Tea in Tokyo

The Peninsula Hotel is truly a five star hotel. Where else can guests of the hotel get chaffeured around Tokyo in Rolls Royces. (Rooms here also look out onto the Imperial Palace and Ginza district). The highlights here are an accumulation of lots of little things such as the ‘P’ (for Peninsula) emblazoned on the saucers, the perfect sized tea pots (not too much and not too little), the warm oshibori (warm towel) on arrival, decent scones, generous serving portions, and generous seating session. They really know how to look after their guests here at this hotel.

From High Tea in Tokyo
From High Tea in Tokyo

The service here was above par. We overstayed our 3-hour seating session by an hour, yet were not asked to leave. Bonus points right there. They were most accommodating for the 2 vegetarians in our group (notify the hotel in advance, which I always do). I wrote them a thank you email after our visit there, and received a very nice email back. The staff speak excellent English – super impressive English I might add. All staff were most attentive to us, despite how crowded and busy they were. Christmas Tea Party in Tokyo is hereby going to be a tradition.

From Christmas Tea at the Peninsula
From Christmas Tea at the Peninsula

Peninsula Hotel afternoon tea details can be found here.

Photos from the first time I went to the Peninsula for tea (Autumn tea set in 2009) can be found here

Fit for a queen: Fortnum and Masons high tea, Tokyo

If it’s good enough for the Queen, then I suppose it’s good enough for me. Fortnum and Mason is tea brand with a rich history, Fortnum and Mason being the names of the two chaps that founded it. They are actually the appointed grocers by royal warrant for the Royal Family of England, and famed for their teas, groceries and luxury hampers, and have been around since 1707 serving Victorian high society. Three centuries, and still going strong. Not too shabby, at all. Their headquarters is in London which looks super fancy. According to Wikipedia, the Fortnum and Mason tea store in Piccadily, London underwent a 24 million (British pounds) refurbishment for their 300th anniversary in 2007. Wow. There establishment is like a mini-department grocery store, and also houses 5 restaurants where you can enjoy both afternoon tea and high tea (yes, there is a difference). Would be amazing to go there. It’s almost like a royal tea gallery. Will be on my to-do list when by perchance I shall ever be in London again. Do a Google image search for Fortnum and Mason – lots of fun ogling at the pictures.

From Fortnum and Mason

The first time I came across Fortnum and Mason’s was at Yokohama. They have a tea salon at the big Lala port shopping centre. I looked up their Japanese website and saw that they had other locations. The only one in Tokyo is at Nihonbashi, with other stores in Nagoya and Sendai. Fi was visiting from Hokkaido for the weekend and wanted to partake in tea. Fi, her dad – who also joined us, and I enjoyed a nice traditional British afternoon tea at the Fortnum and Mason tea salon in Nihonbashi. Fi did not arrive empty-handed either. She gave me some Hokkaido omiyage – potatoes from Kutchan, home to the potato festival. Gotta love Hokkaidoites. Fi and her dad are from England, so it was most appropriate that I chose this particular venue (I might add, this was not by accident). The tea salon is located in the 2nd basement floor of the Mitsukoshi department store (Shin Kan) in Nihonbashi. On the odd occasion, it’s nice to not do a hotel tea.

From Fortnum and Mason

We each ordered the 3-tiered afternoon set and it did not disappoint. First of all, a cake sample platter was brought out to us. On it were about 8 different cakes. We could each select 2 cakes for our set. We each each chose 2 different cakes each, which we would share, thereby getting to try 6 different cakes. The sandwiches were plentiful here, and even the cucumber sandwich made an appearance. Simple but delicious fillings. Tasty, simple sandwiches, and some variety scones with jam and cream. Very traditional here. All the teas are, of course, Fortnum and Mason branded, and mostly a black tea variety. It was nice that on the menu, that they categorised the teas according to strength. I went the royal blend, which I did not think was so strong. I am of the opinion though, that I think a lot of their tea blends are quite similar tasting. I am a huge of English breakfast tea, so I enjoy blend variations of that tea. (Reminds me of a funny story actually, when I was in London about 7 years ago, I went to a cafe and ordered an English breakfast tea, but what I ended up being served was an English breakfast fry-up of eggs, sausages etc.)

From Fortnum and Mason
From Fortnum and Mason
From Fortnum and Mason

The afternoon tea set here is reasonably priced too at 2520yen. Your choice of only one tea though, but you are allowed hot water refills of that tea. Serving portions were very decent too. Thank you to Fi’s dad who shouted us on this occasion. My only complaint about the Nihonbashi Fortnum and Mason tea salon was the fact that it was boiling hot in there. Central heating was cranked up, and the bright lights generated a lot of heat. All of us were feeling the heat. It was like a sauna. One does not want to perspire whilst sipping tea. Apart from the (dis)comfort factor, afternoon tea at Fortnum’s is a pleasant one. After eating and drinking, be sure to check out their store which stocks a very pretty range of teas, biscuits, and other condiments (preserves and the like). Got to love their packaging!

From Fortnum and Mason
From Fortnum and Mason

Yes, they have my royal seal of approval.

From Fortnum and Mason
From Fortnum and Mason
From Fortnum and Mason

For more photos, click here. Some interesting, useful links: Read about Fortnum and Mason on Wikipedia here. Fortnum and Mason UK website here. Lots of interesting reading to be had on that site. Refer to the links at the bottom of the page eg history/timeline through the centuries, and their restaurants. Fortnum and Mason Japan website, click here. Fortnum and Mason Mitsukoshi Nihonbashi tea salon, here.

No frills afternoon tea

Last Wednesday was Culture Day in Japan – another public holiday and day off in which to enjoy another afternoon tea. Culture Day it was, and cultured up I did, by drinking more tea.

From Courtyard Marriot tea

In a period of 11 days, this was my third partaking in afternoon tea. The request this time was for a cheap afternoon tea, and cheap it was. We went to possibly the cheapest afternoon tea establishment in Tokyo. However, it is nice to know that cheap does not necessarily mean bad. I had consulted my High Tea spreadsheet and came up with the Courtyard Marriot hotel in Ginza. Here you can partake in afternoon tea for 1680yen. Print off the offline coupon and you can score yourself an additional 10% discount.

From Courtyard Marriot tea

The lounge was nothing fancy, more like a really, really nice cafe/coffee shop in the lobby of a hotel. The three of us all ordered an afternoon tea set which consisted of sandwiches, one scone, pumpkin pie, and 2 little cakes. The food was tasty, very good. Nothing gourmet, but simple and delicious. There are only four basic teas that you can choose from – darjeeling, assam, earl grey or UVA. We all went the UVA (a Ceylon tea) which was perfect. UVA is a lighter tasting, less astringent black tea. Just what I was in the mood for. Here they tea is served in cups, and you can get as many cup refills as you like, but only of your one choice of tea. So you need to choose one tea and stick with it for the whole session. No tea sampling here.

From Courtyard Marriot tea
From Courtyard Marriot tea
From Courtyard Marriot tea

Afternoon tea at the Courtyard Marriot hotel is relaxing. It’s low key and no frills and very affordable. Afternoon tea without it’s pretentiousness. Endless cups of tea, yummy food, and no time limit. A pretty delightful experience. After about 4 hours of tea, we stayed to enjoy their 300yen glasses of wine.

From Courtyard Marriot tea
From Courtyard Marriot tea

Ginza is always a buzzing, glamorous district. The lights all come on during the evening, and Christmas illuminations will soon be up. After spending over 6 hours at the hotel, I walked then from Ginza to Tokyo station (about a 25-30min walk) through the cool, crisp Autumn night, slightly buzzing from the three glasses of wine. Courtyard Marriot Hotel, Ginza – Oasis Lounge Website in Japanese is here. The discount applies to their whole menu. More photos here

Autumn afternoon tea at the Shangri-la Hotel, Tokyo

Of all the seasons to do afternoon tea, Autumn would have to be the best. The cooler weather and the changing leaves is the ideal climate to enjoy hot cups of tea and comfort foods like scones, sandwiches and sweets in a nice warm lounge room whilst sinking into plush comfortable seats. A lot of hotels take advantage of the autumn season and offer a special seasonal menu showcasing typical autumn produce like pears, chestnuts and persimmons.

From Shangri-la High Tea

It actually also occurred to me that it has been one year since I started doing high teas in Tokyo. This exact time last year (in 2009) was my first high tea in Tokyo at the Peninsula Hotel – which coincidentally has also been the best place to date, in my opinion, to do afternoon tea in Tokyo. I racked up venue number 8 over the weekend on my High tea Tokyo Project (my quest to do every high tea available in Tokyo). By the time Sunday rolled around, Saturday’s typhoon had passed, and whilst it was still overcast, at least the rain held off. This time the occasion was Tami’s birthday get-together. Inspired by the mad hatter’s tea party in Disney’s Alice in Wonderland, she wanted to have a fancy tea party for her birthday. High tea is becoming a thing peoples! Become a part of the high tea movement! She settled on the Shangri-la hotel (which is the one I had hoped she would decide on, and the one that I had suggested). The Shangri-la was offering a special Autumn Afternoon Tea set only until the end of November, so I am glad I got the chance to try it. Being an autumn afternoon set it made use of of a lot of chestnuts.

From Shangri-la High Tea

The Lobby Lounge of the Shangri-la Hotel is on the 28th floor of the Marunouchi Trust Tower building, right outside Tokyo station (North Yaesu/Nihonbashi exit). The details to decor at the Shangri-la is exquisite with an elegant oriental touch. The layout of the room reminded me a lot of the Mandarin Oriental tea lounge with it’s window seating, and counter bar.

From Shangri-la High Tea
From Shangri-la High Tea
From Shangri-la High Tea

The food here was delectable (a new adjective to my food repetoire). I was most impressed by the sandwiches which were savoury delights to the palate. These were fancy appetizers. I also loved the patterned tea set and tea cups. The food here was so rich and decadent that I didn’t even finish all of the desserts tier, a first ever for me. They also had some very interesting fancy teas. I tried the Shangri-la hotel blend which was basically an assam and darjeeling blend – can’t go wrong there. I also had the Darjeeling Blend (darjeeling is apparently know as the “champagne of teas”), and I also tried the almond chocolate tea. This was more bitter than sweet. It was like the coffee of teas. Not being a coffee drinker, I didn’t enjoy it as much as I thought I would. Probably one of my favourite teas on the menu was the Autumn Alascian Garden tea, which I got to try a sip of, but ran out of time to order a pot of. This was a real interesting herbal tea blend consisting of mirabel, rhubarb (!), centaurea and calendula. I don’t know what half of those ingredients are but it was fine tea indeed. I am interested in getting my hands on some of that Alascian Garden tea – not sure if it’s a hotel blend, or whether it’s a real tea available on the market.

From Shangri-la High Tea
From Shangri-la High Tea

Service was good, food was excellent, decor detail stunning, views pretty good too – we could see the Sky Tree nearing construction, and live music from a pianist added a nice touch. The downside was that the tea session was limited to only 2 hours which was definitely not enough time. I felt hurried. I felt rushed to get through the tea and food without really eating slowly and savouring everything. 3 hours minimum needed to enjoy high tea. No debate about it. The tea lounge though was very busy with pretty much all seats occupied, and pending reservations after our session so they needed guests to be in and out, which was a shame.

From Shangri-la High Tea
From Shangri-la High Tea

Gourmet food and tea quality was top notch though, and so is the price tag. It was the most expensive high tea to date, at 4290yen. For that amount of money, you could have gotten a decent 3-course meal and not have been hurried out. This venue is going to be a tough one to rank. I am undecided which I liked better – the Park Hyatt or the Shangri-la’s high tea…on seconds thoughts I think I liked this one. It’s fine dining high tea, on the classy elegant side and should get the credit it deserves. Kudos to the pastry chefs at the Shangri-la. Fine job. In terms of food, tea and details, it kicked arse over the Park Hyatt. Although I thoroughly enjoyed my experience at the Park Hyatt it wasn’t on the merits of its afternoon tea.

From Shangri-la High Tea
From Shangri-la High Tea

The complete photo album can be viewed here. The Shangri-la afternoon tea information: English Japanese Read their Dining Events for up-to-date dining and seasonal afternoon tea specials. 5192692 2010-11-03 03:12:11 2010-11-03 02:12:11 open closed autumn-afternoon-tea-at-the-shangri-la-hotel-tokyo publish 0 0 post 0 food High/Afternoon Tea: Tokyo Japan Tea Tokyo Tokyo Dining _edit_last 253158 _wp_old_slug 1609 BottleLobotomy bottlelobotomy@gmail.com 118.109.101.20 2010-11-05 14:19:29 2010-11-05 13:19:29 Aleisha, My wife and I always look forward to reading your new reviews of Tokyo’s afternoon tea locations. Please keep up the great work! Have you thought of venturing into Yokohama for afternoon tea? BL 1 0 0 1611 Alei aleishariboldi@gmail.com 118.8.143.209 2010-11-08 03:08:51 2010-11-08 02:08:51 Thank you for reading, and leaving a comment. I love high teas! And yes, I am definitely interested in venturing into Yokohama for tea and cakes, time permitting. There are actually a few venues that I want to get around to in Yokohama that I’ve had my eyes on so perhaps in the New Year… 1 1609 253158 Sailing on the Nile http://memoirsofaleisha.blog.com/2010/11/04/sailing-on-the-nile/ Thu, 04 Nov 2010 02:59:17 +0000 aleishariboldi@gmail.com http://memoirsofaleisha.blog.com/?p=5192693 So one of the things that I did in Egypt was do a 3-night/4-day luxury cruise along the Nile River. I started from Aswan and sailed north to Luxor. After having spent a week on my own in Egypt, I met up with Bex from the UK for the cruise part. In Aswan we sailed on a felucca (an Egyptian sailing boat), which was most relaxing, and then we boarded our luxury cruise as we spent the next couple of days cruising down the Nile with some sightseeing stops along the way. The heat in Aswan was intense. Between 35-40 degrees celcius everyday. Cruises, generally aren’t my thing but along the Nile River it was actually really relaxing. It didn’t feel like the cruise liner was moving. Something like this I can handle. A cruise on the open high seas would be another thing altogether as I’m apt to be seasick. This cruise though was calm, and relaxing. It was nice to sit and do nothing. We spent the mornings sightseeing, and then the afternoons indulging in tea and afternoon snacks with a book, and dip on the deck pool, watching the sun set. Ah t’was the life indeed. All meals included – buffet breakfast, buffet lunch and buffet dinner. Thou shalt not go hungry on a Nile River Cruise.

From Nile Cruise Day 1
From Nile Cruise Day 1
From Nile Cruise Day 1
From Nile Cruise Day 1
From Nile Cruise Day 1
From Nile Cruise Day 1

More photos available here. 5192693 2010-11-04 03:59:17 2010-11-04 02:59:17 open closed sailing-on-the-nile publish 0 0 post 0 Egypt Travel travel _edit_last 253158 _wp_old_slug Enchanted with Enchan-thé http://memoirsofaleisha.blog.com/2010/11/08/enchanted-with-enchan-the/ Mon, 08 Nov 2010 03:06:11 +0000 aleishariboldi@gmail.com http://memoirsofaleisha.blog.com/?p=5192694 Enchan-thé – Is that not the best name for a tea store. Ever. It totally kicks arse over the name that I have in my head if I was to ever own a tea store/salon. In my blog review of the Shangri-la tea, I mentioned that I was interested in the tea that was called the Autumn Alsacian Garden Tea. I did some Internet research on it, and all I could come up with, was that Alsace is a name of a small region in France. I could find nothing in relation to tea. The description of that tea at the Shangri-la said that it was a blend of fine tea from China and Sri Lanka with mirabel, rhubarb, cantaurea and calendula from Alsacian Garden. Alsace being a region of France, I discovered.

From Shangri-la High Tea

I emailed the hotel last week asking them for any information at all on the tea, in particular, where I could buy it. I asked them whether they would either sell me some of the tea directly or if they could tell me their supplier. To my excitement I received a very well-written English response from them the very next day. This particular tea is purchased through a supplier, so not a hotel blend, and she gave me a direct link to their website. www.enchan-the.com “The Art of French Tea”. How awesome is that for a tea store name. I do love and appreciate a good pun! “Enchante” in French, an introductory meaning “a pleasure to meet you”, and then “thé” – French for ‘tea’ being added to the end. Pure genius of a name for a French tea store. This supplier specialises in French tea (フランス紅茶専門店). And the tea which I like, is actually called ‘Petite France’ through the supplier, and was renamed by Shangri-la for their tea menu. The Enchan-thé website is pretty cool – a blend of Japanese and French, and lots of interesting gourmet exotic tea blends, which can be purchased through their website. They also sell a range of coloured teapots, accessories and gifts – all tea-related of course. When one thinks of tea, they do not think of France, so this website is quite fascinating as it specialises in the Art of French Tea. I will now also be able to get my hands on some of that ‘Petite France’ (Autumn Alscian Garden tea) which is actually one of their new tea products . You can order direct online (they deliver throughout Japan), and read the staff blog, and the owner’s blog. Will be nice to actually read stuff in Japanese that I will actually enjoy reading about. (Site is not available in English). From the website, it does not sound like they have a cafe/restaurant or a shop (they mostly import and supply, rather than retail sales), but the listed business address is in Tokyo (Komagome area). Will be bookmarking their website for sure.

Tea at the Park Hyatt, Tokyo

Thanks to the movie “Lost in Translation”, the Park Hyatt Hotel has been the “go to” place for a fancy night out. A cocktail at the New York Bar and Grill on the 52nd floor, the scene where Bill Murray and Scarlett Johanssen cross paths, is now an obligatory drinking spot for tourists visiting Tokyo. I’ve been there and done that a couple of times now, albeit a few years ago. I was back at the Park Hyatt Hotel over the weekend, this time, to enjoy high tea. The occasion – Skye’s birthday. I had said I would organise her 30th birthday soiree. She invited a small group of friends, and I arranged the venue. The Afternoon Tea at the Park Hyatt takes place in the Peak Lounge located on level 41 of the Park Tower in Shinjuku. The Peak Lounge is a lounge restaurant/cafe by day and bar/dining by night. It’s a bamboo themed lounge with a glass atrium. It commands a 270 degree over Shinjuku, Tokyo and beyond. Even a glimpse of Mount Fuji on a clear day.

From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea

I had booked well in advance for the occasion as we wanted to guarantee ourselves window seats to enjoy the views from its huge glass windows. The Park Hyatt is one of the few high tea venues in Tokyo with a view. Groups of 4 are ideal for window seating. A table for 6 required a bit more dialogue back and forth with the hotel. Of the 6 people in attendance, three had dietary requirements, so best to let the hotel know in advance. They were most accommodating. We had 2 vegetarian afternoon tea sets, and 1 semi-vegetarian set (meat ok, no seafood), and three regular afternoon tea sets. (The sandwiches usually contain meat and seafood such as salmon or prawns.)

From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea

It was a lovely afternoon for a birthday afternoon tea on an autumn Saturday. We were blessed with great weather so that we could actually enjoy the view from our window seats. We glammed up for the occasion. I wore a dress and heels – a very rare occasion where I wear either. I scrub up quite well when I put in a little effort. I’ll take jeans and sneakers anyday though. I much prefer to dress for comfort.

From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea

I do love high tea, and as far as high teas go, the Park Hyatt was pretty good. It won points on reservation service (they were most accommodating to all our requests), food was very good (sandwiches were probably my least favourite though), atmosphere and views were outstanding. It lost points on extremely slow service. Order your pot of tea half an hour before you actually want it because it will take that long for it to be brought out. But then it got bonus points for all the extra sweets and hor’d’eouvres that you get. So the way that afternoon tea works at the Park Hyatt is that you order the afternoon tea set which is your three platters of sandwiches, scones and sweets. You can then choose as many different pots of teas as you like from the menu. In addition, throughout the day/afternoon, waiters walk around to your table delivering trays of extra sweets and appetizers from which you can choose whatever you like and have as many as you like, and it’s free. The afternoon tea session is however limited to 3 hours, and you will be gently reminded of that. I thought the tea selection was very limited and not at all creative. There was a limited handful, and nothing really exotic. Just regular assam, darjeeling, earl grey, and some Asian/herbal teas. I didn’t think the teas were very special. In fact, quite ordinary. The afternoon tea costs 3200yen but with service tax etc added, it totals to 3520yen which is standard for high tea. The extra food platters that come around during afternoon tea is a nice touch though.

From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea

It was a girl’s day out, although Skye’s bf did join us later for a late dinner and drinks. After afternoon tea which ended at 6pm, we then switched from cakes to cocktails and headed to level 52 to the New York Bar, a la Lost in Translation style. If you are not a guest of the hotel, entry after 8pm costs 2200yen. Prior to 8pm there’s no seating charge, however if you stay past 8pm, you will be charged. So you need to be in and out before 8pm to avoid the charge. We lounged around in the Bar enjoying the night lights of Tokyo with cocktail in hand. We then headed into Shinjuku proper for a late dinner and drinks at an izakaya. I’m such a high tea nerd. But it’s such a relaxing hobby. Throughout the year I have been keeping a spreadsheet of every venue that offers high tea in Tokyo and keeping notes on them, and ranking them. I realised that I’ve only done about 7 of them. Feels like I’ve done so much more than that! Still got so many to go.

From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea

Skye had a great birthday, so mission accomplished. I already have my birthday high tea planned for next year. Very excited. It’s the only thing I am looking forward to about turning 30 – it’s going to be the creme de la creme of high tea extravagances. Enjoy the fancy pics!

From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea
From Park Hyatt High Tea

 

Zabou: high tea at the Cerulean Tower Hotel, Shibuya

Zabou: My new word which captures the essence of tea. So another high tea venue in Tokyo crossed off my list – Cerulean Tower Hotel in Shibuya. The Garden Lounge at Cerulean Hotel is called Zabou. My translation of the word was “Sit and forget” (a direct translation of the two kanji which make up the word) which is exactly what you want to do in a lounge drinking tea and eating scones. Sit, relax and forget about everything else. It’s a most appropriate name for a tea lounge, don’t you think. My interpretation wasn’t too far off. Let me quote the concept of Zabou as defined in the Zabou menu: “Zabou is a Japanese expression for the serene state of mind that one achieves at the height of the traditional Japanese tea ceremony. The mind is cleared and all unpleasant thoughts are cast away so that the soul can relax and take in the beauty of nature. We hope that your visit to Zabou will relax you and fill you with calm and enlightenment.”

Wow. That for me sums up the joy of tea and the pleasure of high/afternoon tea. Some people get massages, some people pray. Me, I drink tea.

The afternoon tea set at Zabou needs to be booked in advance. The set is called the Tour d’ensemble and it is pretty darn delicious. The food is gourmet, and is is definitely one of the better tasting afternoon tea sets around. I think this creeps up within my top three in Tokyo. The savoury tier is really good. It’s lighter on the sandwiches and consists of other appetisers instead. There was a pumpkin mousse, marinated mushrooms, a mini quiche, ham on baguette, and a bread stick. It was all very good. Definitely a winner. The vegetarian set they prepared for Skye was also very impressive. (Let the hotel know in advance of any dietary requirements. They are very accommodating.)

On the scone tier – there were 3 scones – plain, brown sugar and, and one other one. These were good scones, a lot better than some others that I’ve had. I especially enjoyed the condiments – cream, and the lemon butter was extremely nice. Not a raspberry jam fan.

As for the sweets, these too were quite divine. All-round, this was an excellent afternoon tea set in terms of taste. Tea here was also very good. From the tea menu you can try and have as many different pots of tea as you like. I had about four pots of tea. The teas come out in different shaped teapots, and the chinese teas come out in a little terracotta pot. I had Assam tea, white peach tea (surprisngly very good), African morning tea (a bit too creamy), and a Chinese tea called Oriental Beauty.

We whiled away about 3.5 hours here, drinking endless pots of tea. The Lounge is located on the lobby floor so there’s no view but it’s good for people-watching as people come in and out of the lobby, wedding receptions etc. The Lounge is nice and elegant but lacks a bit of character and not as comfy seating as the Westin Hotel.

Excellent value at 3200yen for a delicious afternoon tea set, endless pots of assorted tea. Convenient location – 2 minutes from the West exit of Shibuya station (cross over the big intersection footbridge and it’s the tall tower that you see. And in case you were wondering, Cerulean is a colour. It’s shades of blue ranging from sky blue, deep blue to green-blue. Embrace Zabou. Details for afternoon tea at the Cerulean Hotel in Shibuya can be found here Full photo album can be viewed here

High Tea at the Westin Hotel, Tokyo

Last Sunday was not spent competing in an open water swim race. Instead, I spent it indoors enjoying a glorious summer Sunday in Tokyo. First, it was to the Tokyo Metropolitan Photography Museum, followed by High Tea at the Westin Hotel. Both are within metres from each other in Ebisu. According to my research, I have so far found approximately 38 places in Tokyo to do high tea at. I’ve already been to about 6 of them. I am aiming to do one a month, but at that rate, it’s going to to take a few years! Might have to make it a fortnightly thing. So it’s been about 2 months since my last Tokyo high tea. Most of my weekends throughout the summer have been consumed by OWS races. It was nice to take a day off and indulge with pots of tea and food treats. The Westin Hotel in Ebisu, is a very nice hotel. Grand lobby and a great Lounge, where the afternoon tea is offered. I had made advance reservations and was glad I did, because there quite a few people. We got lucky and had window seats. We were on ground floor so not much of an aerial view but it did look out into a courtyard with a water feature. It was a very standard high tea set. The 3-tiered platter, complete with desserts, scones, and sandwiches. The vegetarian option for Skye came with salad sandwiches and a vegetable sticks with dips (in place of the quiche). I thought the desserts were quite nice, but both the sandwiches and scones were disappointing. I didn’t realise how difficult it is to get decent scones in Japan. Really, they’re not that hard to make but by golly, my goodness, I am yet to eat decent scones in Japan. The sandwiches were also so-so. I did enjoy the quiche. Service here was good, as is the decor and ambience. The sofa chairs were so comfy. And it’s an easy venue to while away time. That’s probably why they set a 3hour limit. The food wasn’t up to par as some of the other venues I’ve been too. The tea selection whilst not overly expansive, was still very decent. They used great leaves and most teas were served in glass teapots. The great thing here is that you can order as many pots of tea as you like and try any of the teas or coffees on the menu. Both Skye and I consumed four pots of tea each during our 3.5 hour tea session. Mind you, each teapot got you 2-3 cups of tea. So after drinking about 10-12 cups of tea each, after two hours in, we were pretty much playing tag team for toilet runs. We overstayed the limit by an extra half hour but we weren’t harassed out at all. In fact, after 3.5 hours, we left on our own accord, only because we kept running to the toilet back and forth that we decided we should leave. I still have to admit that the best High Tea in Tokyo is the Peninsula Hotel. That has become the standard, the yardstick by which I measure all other highs tea by (in Tokyo anyway). St Christophers Tea Garden also rates up there in the top 3. The High Tea at the Westin is a flat 3500yen per person which is standard and good value for the all food and unlimited tea (extra with an alcoholic beverage). Afternoon tea is served between 12-6pm (3-hour time limit). It is also a very convenient hotel to get to. Take the JR train to Ebisu station. Take the East Skywalk exit which will take you out to Ebisu Garden Place which is like a big forum, square. Walk right through the Garden Place past the French chateau and it’s the hotel clearly marked on the left hand side.

Looking ahead

One of my little life’s philosophies is: Always give yourself something to look forward to. It can be something as simple as a dinner with friends, watching a movie, getting a massage or manicure, or something as big as a holiday, trip overseas, a big function or event.

These Open Water Swims (OWS) throughout this summer have really given me something to look forward to. Surprisingly, I enjoy competing, and I look forward to race day. Even though it’s challenging, it’s keeping me fit and focused during the week. It’s also made me realise how much I love swimming. Swimming has always been there in the background of my life, but lately it really has occurred to me that’s a huge part of my life, and it’s kind of nice to take it up more seriously. I’ve been really obsessed with swimming lately, in particular long-distance swimming. I really want to push myself to swim longer distances and get up to 5km, 10km swims. I think this is something that I really want to pursue – yes, long distance swimming. It’s kind of my niche sporting activity at the moment. I’ve been obsessed with looking up long distance swims on the Internet and I’ve got some goals in sight with some swims over the next year or so in some exotic destinations. Having something to look forward to is an important motivation. Lately, it feels though my time is counted by the number of swim races I can do.

Tomorrow, I’ve got a 2km open water swim in Shizuoka. I feel ok with the training I did this week to do the distance comfortably. I was more focused on being comfortable with the distance rather than speed. Since last Sunday’s race, I managed to do the following: Monday – 2km swim in about 45min

Tuesday -1km swim

Wednesday -4km jog, 1km walk (total 45min cardio – cross training)

Thursday – rest.

Friday – 2.2 km in about 45min

Saturday – will be rest.

And tomorrow race day.

My motivation at the moment, is my upcoming trip to Egypt. I’ve got three weekends, and two swim races to get through and then I am treating myself to a nice holiday.

Food Frenzy in the ‘fu: Brunch and Bake-off

I was back in Hirafu a fortnight ago for the Hokkaido Lake Toya swim. The Saturday was spent eating up a storm. First was brunch at Sekka. Brunch has taken over as my favourite meal of the day. It’s actually a bit of toss-up for me to say whether I like brunch or high tea better. A nice pot of tea to wash down bacon, eggs, sausages, mushrooms and pancakes well – it was breakfast and lunch together. Hence they call it brunch. You’re eating two meals in one! As if all that wasn’t enough (well, maybe I wasn’t quite full), Fi and I decided to have a bake-off. Basically kinda like a mini quick-challenge in Top Chef lingo. The key ingredient was ‘chocolate’. We headed off to the supermarket to load up on ingredients. We each spent a bit over 3500yen on ingredients alone! Who knew baking was so expensive. The bake-off was off, but not before we made some cocktails – Pimms Punch, apparently a British favourite consisting of lemonade, Pimms, orange slices, pineapple slices, mint, and strawberries and cucumber slices (optional). Cocktails and Cooking – a great combo for a Saturday arvo. The final culinary delights were: chocolate and green tea muffins, a chocolate cake, and rocky road – all made by me. Fi made a yoghurt chocolate mousse and a chocolate cheesecake. According to the panel of taste-testers, Fi’s chocolate cheesecake won. I still maintain that I make the best rocky road ever. The best translation of rocky road into Japanese is “deko boko choco”! In the evening we hit the pub where I hosted the local trivia night. More alcohol units consumed to wash down a meat pie and mashed potato. All that indulgence certainly took its toll the next day in the Toya swim with some rather slow swim times. Check out the culinary cake creations below. I can bake as well as I eat.

Brunch at Sekka

Pimms Punch

chocolate bake-off

chocolate cake with white chocolate icing

dekoboko choco = rocky road

Minami Boso, Iwai beach, OWS numero 3

Another swimming Sunday to start off the month of August. I set off early for the 2 hour train trip to Iwai beach which is in the Minami Boso region of Chiba prefecture. I was up at 6am and took a limited express train (a semi shinkansen) to Iwai. I was lucky to make the Sazanami limited express train from Tokyo. What I didn’t realise was that the platform at Tokyo station (the Keiyo line) is a good 1km walk from the regular JR train platforms. If you’ve ever taken the train from Tokyo to Disneyland, you’ll know it’s that underground platform far far away from all the other trains. Just making the train in time, I at least traveled in comfort to Iwai. It was pretty empty at 7.30am.

The weather was hot and muggy but really overcast and smoggy. I got to Iwai station a bit after 9am and followed some other guys that looked like they were also there for the swim (they were). I got to the race venue just a tad before 9.30am. The mercury had already hit 33 degrees and Iwai beach was packed. It was the most crowded beach I have ever seen in Japan. The amount of people that were there well before 9.30am was unbelievable. I’m guessing it’s a pretty popular beach.

Iwai beach was the setting for my third OWS and the third prefecture (having already done Shizuoka and Hokkaido). I was registered for the 1km swim. A nice standard distance at a beach (an ocean swim). This is kind of my comfort zone at the moment. Like the Atami swim this event was an JIOWSA swim event. I had initially wanted to spend the weekend in Chiba near the beach to save me the trouble of an early start on the Sunday. But alas, there was no available accommodation whatsoever. This is becoming a bit of a problem. Next week’s swim in Shizuoka again, I was not able to book anywhere. Iwai is a small coastal beach town so accommodation is limited and what is available was already snapped up, despite my efforts to try and book accommodation 2 weeks in advance. I tried like every single accommodation near Iwai to no avail. I can now see why there were no available lodgings. That whole coastline was packed. I guess it didn’t help that it was a hot summer’s day, a weekend, and school holidays to boot. The conditions were hot andI was sweating like nobody’s business. Even the sand was too hot to walk on barefooted. There was no shade whatsoever. The heat was relentless. Vitamin D intake exceeded.The sun cream I was applying was basically turning to sweat. My race didn’t start until a bit after 11am. By this time as well, I hadn’t had anything to eat. No time in the morning for breakfast, I had just made the trains in the morning and hadn’t eaten anything on the 2 hour journey.

When I got to the beach, there was of course no food nor vending machines. I was hot and wanted to keep hydrated as well, but also need to preserve what little water I had for after the race as well. I had wanted to squeeze in a conbini run but didn’t come across any. There was quite a decent turnout for this race. I even recognised a couple of people that were there from the Atami swim. 1km isn’t that far, but when you look out into the ocean, 1km looks really far. Those buoys look impossibly distant. The first race was the 400m event. They then moved the buoys even further out for the 1km course. It was a triangular course, swimming out to the right, then across the beach parallel to the shore, and then back into the shore.

There were enough competitors to have two starts for this event. All up, according to the program schedule, there were 33 females and 87 males for a total of 120 competitors in the 1km swim. We were given bright orange swim caps for the 1km. The water temp was beautiful, I reckon about 24 degrees, The first 300m or so were hard. I always find the first few hundred metres of a race the most difficult as the body is trying to warm up and adjust until you find a rhythm. The start is also where it’s the most violent and you wait for the pack to thin out. I was enjoying the beautiful water. This was probably the most enjoyable ocean swim to date. I didn’t think too much about the race and was really enjoying just being in beautiful water and being able to cool off.

As far as beaches in Japan goes, this one was pretty good. Not too many waves, although bouncy enough out there, perfect water temp and clean clear salt water. There were patches out there in the ocean though where the water was really cold and then you’d hit a warm patch again. It was a most refreshing swim and I felt comfortable with my pace. Vision was my biggest problem in this race. After passing the 400m mark my goggles started to fog to the point where I couldn’t really see the buoys so I had to spend a couple of seconds treading water and clear them but when I put them back on again a little salt water had gotten in and I didn’t want to waste time letting the water in, so one eye got a bit of salty water in it for the rest of the race.

One thing I find with ocean swimming is that I often swim semi-blind. Because I wear glasses and obviously don’t wear glasses or contact lenses in the water, and I’m only wearing goggles, it means that I can’t see long distances out in the ocean. I actually have trouble seeing the buoys and I actually just rely on other swimmers. I follow other swimmers and let them guide me. They really need more buoys between the main buoys to guide your way to the next one. When there is no buoy for 400m or so until the next one, it makes it hard to know if you’re on course or not. I remember feeling quite thirsty out there too – all that salt water in my mouth. After passing the 2nd last buoy before heading back into the shore, I came upon a little problem. I was not alone either. We had just swum across the ocean and were heading back into the shore but after coming around that buoy we couldn’t see where to go next. Myself and some other swimmers had to stop for a second to get our bearings. After coming round that buoy and looking back into the shore, all we could see was a totally packed shoreline and we had no idea where our set-up finish line was because all we could see was people along the whole coast that we had no idea in which direction to head back in to. One of the other swimmers yelled out to a nearby patrol guard for the direction and we were pointed the right way. I then tried to follow other swimmers as best I could using them as my eyes. When I could see the sand at the bottom of the ocean again, I knew that I was getting closer to the shore. When swimming in to the finish line, I never know at what point to keep on swimming or stand up and run to the finish. Is it faster to run through the water, or swim through??

I got position 44 out of 120 of all competitors in the 1km swim, which I thought was pretty decent. In the top 3rd. I felt my time would be average around the 20 minute mark. My time in fact was 21 minutes and 16 seconds for a 1km ocean swim. I placed 8th out of 10 in my age category. I’m always placing 7th or 8th. And placed 19th out of 34 women across all age groups. An average swim result. But it was a swim that I really enjoyed. I felt good in the water. By now I was pretty hungry, thirsty and damn hot. The day just kept getting hotter and the sweat just kept coming. The next event was the 3km. There were more people in the 3km race event than there were in the 1km – I thought that was pretty impressive. I think the longer distance events are quite popular. 3km – that’s pretty hardcore. The buoys had been moved out even further and they had to do do two laps. Just before 1pm I headed back to the station to head home. Not a single conbini and no food in sight. By this time I still hadn’t eaten a morsel of food since the night before. Iwai is a real inaka place – it’s a place that’s in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by mountains and a coastline. Not much by way of facilities. No conbinis, nor eateries. I came across an omiyage store near the station and settled for a pineapple ice block. Hot, sweat and hungry I downed a water from the vending machine, and two ice creams (the aforementioned pineapple calippo-like ice block and a vanilla Coolish which I ate on the train back. Coolish is a soft serve ice-cream in mini bladder bag which you suck out. Tastes better than the way I have just described it. Still two ice creams was not very substantial.

Made it back to Tokyo with time to catch a movie with a friend in the afternoon – Toy Story 3 in 3D, dubbed in Japanese (yep, my friend booked tickets to the wrong one – the dubbed Japanese version rather than the original English). It was still such a great movie though. Highly recommend. It was funny and touching. The Ken montage scene to Le Freak is GOLD! I really want to see it again in English! By the by, the first day of every month is cheap movie day in Japan. It’s called “First Day” all tickets on a tsuitachi (first day of the month) are 1000yen. 1300yen because we saw it in 3D. This weekend was also the opening weekend in Japan for Inception which was actually our first movie preference but tix were sold out. A satisfying Sunday.

So I’ve accomplished my goal to do at least three open water swims this summer in Japan. But I’m not stopping there. I’m already registered for another two swims. The distances to date have been quite tame. I am ramping up the distances from hereon. Next weekend another swim – a 2km ocean swim in Shizuoka prefecture again. Not sure how I will go with these longer distances. It’s been a while since I’ve done some real long-distance swimming. Even more concerning is the 4km ocean swim in another few weeks! Here are some open water swimming advice/tips that appear in the swim program. The whole program is written in Japanese except for the following three bits which appear in English, which I think is really random: “‘Distraction’ means keeping your mind busy and away from negative thoughts, thinking thoughts unrelated to your swimming – eg. going through lists of things in your mind, such as your favourite movies, books etc.” “Open water swimmers require a completely different type of mental toughness to pool swimmers, as there are completely different aspects and challenges they face when out there in the open water.” “some issues you encounter under the stress of open water swimming can be extremely difficult unless your mind is programmed for mental toughness.”