Apparently this is in a high priced japanese restaurant. They normally serve warm Sake in these Boxes. The point is, that they float while you sit in a hot yacuzi or geothermal well and you have to drink it carefully because that stuff delivers a punch especially when hot.
Wilhelmina, Here in Germany, you can get them in every super market next to regular Garlic. Taste is the same and it is often sold as "China garlic" or "Asia garlic" but I don't know if it is really from there.
Apparently this is in a high priced japanese restaurant. They normally serve warm Sake in these Boxes. The point is, that they float while you sit in a hot yacuzi or geothermal well and you have to drink it carefully because that stuff delivers a punch especially when hot.
Wilhelmina, Here in Germany, you can get them in every super market next to regular Garlic. Taste is the same and it is often sold as "China garlic" or "Asia garlic" but I don't know if it is really from there.
cutlery is fine the way it is without doing something like this
Apparently this is in a high priced japanese restaurant. They normally serve warm Sake in these Boxes. The point is, that they float while you sit in a hot yacuzi or geothermal well and you have to drink it carefully because that stuff delivers a punch especially when hot.
That's beer served in (masu) sake cup.
Whoever thought this was a good idea should have their ironic beard folded a thousand times.
#15 I would've like to have these when I worked in a restaurant. Way less pealing to do.
Here in Germany, you can get them in every super market next to regular Garlic. Taste is the same and it is often sold as "China garlic" or "Asia garlic" but I don't know if it is really from there.
Well, if you stop looking in a mirror, you won't see it anymore.
Seriously... You don't have to make every comment negative.
Have mom make you some pancakes. You will feel better.
"Free"
Turns out this was a misleading Reddit post. It was for one specific neighborhood in Japan. A wealthy neighborhood. Not all of Tokyo.
In Manila, households got a bag of rice and some inexpensive vegetables.