High-end Restaurants From high-end China restaurants to luxurious French restaurants, the best Japanese restaurants can rival world-class standards. Most restaurants are located in first-class hotels or bustling areas such as Ginza, Roppongi, Akasaka and Harajuku in Tokyo, and all kinds of delicious food make gourmets marvel.
Popular restaurants are located in office buildings, basements of department stores, dining floors of shopping malls, and restaurants in underground shopping streets of big stations, and their prices are usually more popular.
At lunchtime, these restaurants will be crowded with office workers, and most people will choose a cheap and rich set meal (called "ordering food" in Japanese). In general restaurants, there will be enough sample food models displayed at the door and marked with prices. So when you don't know how to order, use a finger model. Some restaurants offer Japanese-style English recipes. You can use the simple words in the Travel Handbook published by Japan Tourism Promotion Association to help you order, or you can refer to the popular Japanese diet guides sold by major bookstores.
If you are in a hurry, you can taste the food provided by fast food restaurants, cafes, fast food restaurants and vending machines, which is convenient and cheap.
Most restaurants check out when they leave for the last time, and a few need to buy meal coupons in advance and give them to the waiters. Low-priced restaurants, cafes and fast food restaurants usually only accept cash, and some restaurants generally accept credit cards. There is no need to tip.
A new attempt (1) bento: you can buy bento with strong local characteristics on the train.
(2) Dinner on a cruise ship at night: You can watch the lights on the water at the same time.
(3) Roadside food stalls: Some have seats, which are cheap and delicious.
(4) Dinner performance: Luxury hotels have rich dinners and live entertainment performances.
(5) Convenience store: you can buy sandwiches, lunches and other cooked food.
(6) Many cooked food samples are provided in the basement of department stores.
(7) Rotating Sushi: Customers sit in front of a table equipped with a rotating conveyor belt and retrieve their favorite sushi, which is cheap.