By day, Tokyo is restrained, polite, and immaculate. But by night, especially in Tokyo's rowdy Shinbashi district, it’s a totally different story as the locals and salarymen let loose, boisterous personalities emerging more and more with each kanpai!
Shinbashi, or Shimbashi, known for izakayas and nightlife, hostess clubs and bars, is a haven where Japanese salarymen and OLs (“office ladies”) can spend their precious few off-work hours. Neon lights splash onto the streets, karaoke bars offer rooms where stress can be belted out into a microphone, and capsule hotels are readily available for those few stragglers who miss their last trains home.
Exploring the backstreets of Shinbashi can be a bonding experience for co-workers, as well as the setting for some gentle hazing of salarymen by their bosses. But generally, the atmosphere is rowdy and uninhibited, making Shinbashi the perfect place for salarymen to relax after work, and for visitors to meet locals when they are at their merriest and most outgoing.
Recently, byFood joined forces with the Best Ever Food Review Show, to bring you along on the most incredible food tours in Tokyo. In this video, Sonny explores Shinbashi's popular salarymen haunts with tour guide Satoru! Watch as they bar-hop their way through Tokyo’s Shinbashi food scene, starting at a standing sushi bar, before graduating to raw horse meat, then off to an izakaya making crispy and tender fried chicken skin from a top-secret recipe.
In the end, though, it’s not really about the drinking, or even the food (though, let’s be honest, the food looks good). The most valuable takeaway is connecting with local people through food and drink, sharing laughs and stories, and clinking glasses and shouting “kanpai!” with new friends.