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.

Tim Burton to Issho

Tono to Issho is an odd show and one that pretty much goes over my head multiple times in its 3-minute and 30-second episode time frame. This only seems to have gotten more absurd with the second season. But for whatever reason I get a kick out of it. And some times, like this one, the reference surprises me!

The text is “Sengoku Saikyou (The Scariest Thing in the Warring States)” I’m not a 100% sure what this image, beyond the text, actually has to do with Noh and Nobunaga since Jack and Sally are quite kind, though I guess they are pretty scary, too! You can’t expect me to let a Nightmare Before Christmas joke go by without a mention.

Gosick #024: From Here to Eternity (finale)

The wind that will separate Victorique and Kazuya is a fierce gust that howls for blood. Albert de Blois‘ fiery death has only thrown Sauville deeper into chaos as the beast that is the Ministry of the Occult still tries to catch Victorique in its death throes. While Victorique is fleeing, Kazuya is trying to survive as a front line solider in the middle of hell. Both of them are together in their hearts but will either of them survive long enough to reunite?

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