The first is ignored.
Second. People shouted, "Tsunami!"
Third. People are pointing, "He is a criminal!"
Fourth. Suddenly toss him in the air.
Fifth. "Watch out!"
I knew the Japanese are strange.
You are also a Japanese well-informed person.
The 3rd place of a thing to buy non-Japanese in Japan.
The 3rd place of a thing to buy is a rice cracker.
A rice cracker is snack confectionery healthier than potato chips.
A thing with a low calorie is good.
Senbei are Japanese crackers, made from rice. They come in various shapes, sizes, and flavors, usually savory but sometimes sweet. Senbei are often eaten with green tea as a casual snack and offered to visiting house guests as a courtesy refreshment.
Senbei are usually cooked by being baked or grilled, traditionally over charcoal. While being prepared they may be brushed with a flavoring sauce, often one made of shoyu and mirin. They may then be wrapped with a layer of nori. Alternatively they may be flavored with salt or so-called "salad" flavoring.
In China, senbei are called jiānbǐng. There are varieties like Shandong Jianbing, Tianjin Jianbing. However, these are really a completely different concept. In China, they are more like wraps and pancakes, similar to okonomiyaki, where in Japan they have are hard (not floppy), and bite sized snacks rather than meals.
Sweet sembei came to Japan during the Tang dynasty, the first recorded usage in 737 AD, and still are very similar to Tang traditional styles, originally oft baked in the Kansai area, of which include the traditional roof tile senbei. These include ingredients like potato and wheat flour or glutinous rice, and are similar to castella cakes. (Not like what people most think of senbei today).
What Japanese commonly refer to as sembei nowadays was popularized by a shop in the Edo Period, Sōkajuku, which spread salty soy sauce flavored sembei throughout Japan.
There are several types of traditional Japanese senbei. They include the 2 categories, sweet sembei (over 15 types) and rice candy senbei, and others, which include even fish senbei, lotus senbei and bone senbei.
Modern senbei versions are very inventive and may include flavorings can which range from kimchi to wasabi to curry to chocolate.
Kansai senbei tend to use glutinous rice and have a lightly seasoned and delicate in texture (saku saku). Kantō senbei were originally based on uruchimai, a non-glutinous rice, and they tend to be more crunchy (kari kari) and richly flavored.
(From Wikipedia)
Amazed hours.
The first surprise is a bazooka early morning.
While sleeping fake bazooka fire.
If it continues, it is the Mafia early morning.
After watching the laughing, please.
I knew that the Japanese are strange.
You are also a Japanese well-informed person.
The 4th place of a thing to buy non-Japanese in Japan.
The 4th place of a thing to buy is green tea.
Many polyphenol and Catechins are contained by the low calorie, and green tea is healthily good.
Green tea is a "true" tea, meaning it is made solely with the leaves of Camellia sinensis, that has undergone minimal oxidation during processing. Green tea originates from China and has become associated with many cultures in Asia from Japan to the Middle East. Recently, it has become more widespread in the West, where black tea is traditionally consumed. Many varieties of green tea have been created in countries where it is grown that can differ substantially due to variable growing conditions, processing and harvesting time. Over the last few decades green tea has begun to be subjected to many scientific and medical studies to determine the extent of its long purported health benefits, with some evidence suggesting regular green tea drinkers may have lower chances of heart disease and contracting certain types of cancer.
(From Wikipedia)
Likes Japanese hot spring.
There came a surprise.
On board without knowing what the switch is pressed...
It can laugh at the surprised face.
Japanese prank strange!
You are also a Japanese well-informed person.
non-japanese is the 4th place of a thing to buy in Japan.
The 4th place is a kimono.
It seems that there are some persons who incidentally wear instead of a bathrobe.
The kimono is the national costume of Japan. Originally the word "kimono" referred to all types of clothing, but it has come to denote a particular type of traditional full-length garment. The original and exact word should be wafuku.
Kimonos are T-shaped, straight-lined robes that fall to the ankle, with collars and wide, full-length sleeves. Kimonos are wrapped around the body, always with the left side over the right (except when dressing the dead for burial)and secured by a wide belt called an obi, which is usually tied at the back. Kimonos are generally worn with traditional footwear (especially geta, thonged wood-platform footwear; and zori, a type of thong-like footwear) and split-toe socks (tabi).
Today, kimonos are most often worn by women, and on special occasions. Traditionally, unmarried women wore a style of kimono called furisode,which have floor-length sleeves, on special occasions. A few older women and even fewer men still wear kimonos on a daily basis. Men wear kimonos most often at weddings, tea ceremonies, and other very special or very formal occasions. Kimonos are also worn by both men and women in certain sports, such as kendo. Professional sumo wrestlers are often seen in kimonos because they are required to wear traditional Japanese dress whenever appearing in public.
(From Wikipedia)