不二家的餐點讓人印象深刻,特別是烏龍冷麵和煎餃,清爽且美味。炸豬排外酥內嫩,拉麵則有獨特的肉臊湯頭,整體表現穩定,讓人滿意。
這家居酒屋氛圍溫馨可愛,裝飾充滿日本風情,播放日文歌曲,讓人感受到獨特的文化氣息,整體來說非常療癒。
Fujiya is a warm and charming family-style Japanese izakaya, and it has always been one of my favorite spots in the Zhongshan District. The place has two floors, and the seating is a bit close together, decorated with numerous posters of the Japanese enka singer Shinichi Mori (there are really an incredible number of them), and it plays Japanese songs, giving it a unique atmosphere.
This visit was after 10 PM, and we enjoyed a quite satisfying late-night meal here.
I ordered cold udon noodles paired with a gyoza set; the udon noodles had a good chewiness, with a moderate bounce. After mixing in soy sauce with wasabi and chopped green onions, they were very refreshing, perfect for hot days. The gyoza was not overly greasy, and the small, beautifully fried dumplings dipped in Japanese soy sauce had a simple yet delicious flavor.
My friend ordered the fried pork cutlet set, which had a crispy exterior. It wasn't the kind of frying you would find in chain restaurants; it was already drizzled with tonkatsu sauce. Overall, it was tasty but not ostentatious.
The specialty ramen had a meat sauce base for the broth, along with wontons, which is an extremely Chinese/Taiwanese combination. My friend said it tasted pretty good, but ordering this at a Japanese izakaya felt quite rebellious.
Additionally, I ordered some blanched greens and was pleasantly surprised to receive my favorite, water spinach. It was a bit salty but incredibly delicious; I was really happy to be able to eat water spinach during late-night hours.
Not every dish here is breathtaking at this izakaya, but it's precisely this ordinary experience that makes it feel like a place to visit often. Overall, it's a healing little shop worth checking out.