Guest User
March 23, 2023
As everyone has written, this is an inn with a lobby with chandeliers, crystals, and a carpet with beautiful patterns, and a Japanese garden with Nishikigoi carp swimming. The white and black swans... seem to have already disappeared. For dinner, we had an appetizer, teppanyaki, two hot pots, rice cooked in a pot, and four dishes using solid fuel. In a sense, it means that you can have hot food. The chawanmushi was warm and they served freshly fried tempura. The sashimi was carpaccio. I wonder if they are devising the menu by including Western dishes? Am I the only one who thinks that regular sashimi would have been better? This is the standard course. For breakfast, we had a regular breakfast of delicacies, kamaboko, *yaki, cute salmon, and more, with a hoto made with solid fuel. The large public bath has nice, thick water. It is an alkaline simple spring, but it has a faint sulfur smell. Apparently the men's bath was very spacious and relaxing, and very good. From what I've heard, the women's bath may be about half the size. That's the Showa era. Well, the room I stayed in this time was on the first floor, which had just been renovated. It felt like the lobby had been turned into a guest room. The TV was huge. It also had a semi-open-air bath. However, the bath was on the entrance side, and only the outside air came in, so there was no view and the room had no windows. However, this semi-open-air bath was big and very nice. The shower and hair dryer were refa. Maybe it's aimed at women? There are also rooms with this style facing the garden.
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