Otaku NYC: Otafuku

Japanese food has become ubiquitous enough that you can go to any decent sized metropolitan city and find a Japanese restaurant that will serve sushi, teriyaki, and tempura without breaking a sweat. But there are some Japanese foods that are much harder to find unless you live in very certain cities in the U.S. I remember that when I first started reading Ranma 1/2 one of the things it really made me want to try was okonomiyaki due to my love of Ukyo Kuonji. Even in New York it took me awhile to find somewhere that severed okonomiyaki but eventually I found Otafuku.

Otafuku is not a sit down restaurant. It is a counter for orders, a little standing room, and bench outside and nothing more. The menu is small but they are mostly items you can’t normally find at Japanese restaurants. Okonomiyaki is a cabbage pancake with spices, sauces, and your choice of pork, beef, shrimp, squid, or corn with scallion. I consider it their signature dish. They also have takoyaki (octopus balls) which is something you have surely seen if you have ever watched an anime were they go to a festival. Rounding out their menus is yakisoba (fried noddles) which is probably the easiest to find item normally. You can also get combinations of any of three items above and a yummy taiyaki for desert.

When you are visiting Manhattan you often want to do things that you can only easily do in Manhattan. Otafuku has Japanese street stall food that you can’t easily find outside of Japan definitely making it worth a trip down to St. Marks Place. If you are a New York native then Otafuku is a nice little taste of Japan without the expensive plane ticket.

Otaku NYC: Uniqlo

Uniqlo is a staple clothing store in Japan, where you pick up your basics for everyday. Their branding is clean and graphic which their store reflects as well. The bonus is they make some awesome limited t-shirts featuring all kinds of popular culture; the most important to this article being anime, manga, and video games.

So lucky for us they opened up one on Broadway. With another location having opened up at Herald Square (thanks Sophy for the info!). UPDATE: And there is also one uptown at 1114 Ave of the Americas and 666 5th Ave.

Just as their clothes and themes change, so does their store interior. They even have a tendency to paper their second floor loft walls with blown up manga pages or add in an arcade machine for a time. Changing it up every couple of months keeps the store a continuously fun place to check out.

Back to the t-shirts, they’re well-made and reasonably priced. And what really sets apart their style is the creative way they work in the different series. They are unique designs, not just an image or a logo put in the middle of a t-shirt. Everything from Detective Conan to Gundam, from Mega-Man to Parappa the Rapper has graced the clothing line.

Be sure to get one of the bags with your purchase, too.

Otaku NYC: Hiroko’s Place

If you’re looking for a little place to eat or drink some tea and relax you can head on over to Hiroko’s Place in SoHo. It is a rather nondescript restaurant with a deep-red awning on Thompson Street, but easy to spot when you’re looking for it, with a banner sporting an modernly illustrated girl. The interior is a mix and match setup with couches and old tables where everything is comfortably worn. The food is homey (I recommend the Hamburg Rice) while the tea and coffee are more modern. And to top it off they have manga to read along with art books and fashion magazines though of course in Japanese. Still its nice to pick up something and flip through while waiting for that cup of tea.