






M25***40It is located in front of Exit 7 of Fushimi Station, and it is open from 4pm to 9pm on weekdays. Daijin (the name of the bar) is one of the oldest Japanese bars in Nagoya, and it is always crowded with Japanese male office workers. All you have to do is find a place to sit (or the waiter will take you to a seat), choose your dishes from the small table (or order sake, beer, juice...), finish your meal, and call the waiter. You will see him doing the math with an abacus or a classical Japanese calculator. If you are lucky, you will have a good chat with the local Nagoya person sitting next to you!
It is located in front of Exit 7 of Fushimi Station, and it is open from 4pm to 9pm on weekdays. Daijin (the name of the bar) is one of the oldest Japanese bars in Nagoya, and it is always crowded with Japanese male office workers. All you have to do is find a place to sit (or the waiter will take you to a seat), choose your dishes from the small table (or order sake, beer, juice...), finish your meal, and call the waiter. You will see him doing the math with an abacus or a classical Japanese calculator. If you are lucky, you will have a good chat with the local Nagoya person sitting next to you!
This is a long-established izakaya in Sakae, Nagoya, established in 1907. I ordered bonito flakes, fried salmon, chicken wings, sweetfish, and miso cutlet. Everything was delicious.
Quite a famous shop, I came here because of its reputation, the drinks are great
The place where locals drink wine, not many people, relatively quiet, eat some snacks and drink sake