11-26 March 2019
After thirty hours of non-stop travel from Delhi we finally arrive at our Airbnb in the Gion neighbourhood of Kyoto. We’re brain-dead and hungry. It’s about 9pm local time and we need to eat. Walking the narrow streets of Gion
we’re feeling exhausted, a bit desperate, and not very hopeful since we’re clearly in a quiet residential neighbourhood far from tourist central in Higashiyama. But close to home we see a small pink sign propped on the ground at the entrance to a tiny alleyway: Romance Restaurant. English menu. We walk down the alley and open what seems to be the door to the restaurant. We’re looking straight into a living room. I don’t know who’s more shocked, us or the woman sitting there reading. Anyway, she directs us to the door immediately next to hers. Opening it we discover a tiny narrow space – a bar with seven seats. It is the best find in two weeks in Kyoto.
The owner has no English but we manage to communicate through our various translation devices. From the set menu Don chooses pork and I choose salmon but of course we swap half and half. We are given warm towels to wipe our hands to begin. Our meals come with miso soup loaded with tofu, a bowl of rice, a small dish of grilled eggplant, and a small dish of cold omelette pieces. The pork and salmon are served alongside leafy lettuce with a vinaigrette dressing and some noodles. All of it is delicious. We are given fresh towels again at the end. So gracious, so thoughtful. What a contrast to India! Thirteen nights in Kyoto and we eat at Romance Restaurant for ten of them.
One night we’re at a festival at a temple so we eat street food, and one night we decide to go to a ramen place. Big mistake! It is a glutinous porridge, and so disappointing after the drool-worthy ramen I’d savoured on my previous trip to Japan. Even the sake didn’t help. We don’t eat at Romance on one other night because it is full with all seven seats taken so we walk a little further down the road. In an otherwise empty mom-and-pop restaurant, pop painstakingly and conscientiously makes us his special okonomiyaki, a kind of pancake that evolved in Osaka from the practice of cooking leftovers. He cooks at the table on a grill in front of us, moving with calm deliberation. No need to rush. Just a quiet focus to ensure everything is done right in that meticulous Japanese way. It’s delicious.
But back to Romance! What a find. Basically, although wonderful food is served there, we’ve found the local bar. And I do mean local; it is us and the people who live nearby. We become one of the regulars and are welcomed as such. Often there is a man who can speak English so he translates for us. The owner and chef, Miyoki-san, uses her translation device and I use mine and I learn a few more Japanese words. We discover we have a mutual love of competitive figure skating, and watch the World Championships together while she cooks and serves, and people marvel at my ability to explain what’s happening on the screen. Someone commented it’s as if I can understand Japanese, but no, I just know a lot about skating.
Don and I notice that a couple of the regulars order a little food but basically drink their dinner. One woman hardly eats but drinks three beers and smokes two cigarettes. Ah yes, smoking is allowed. We don’t mind. I’m having so much fun being there as one of the regulars, and the food is so good, that I barely notice the smoke. One man is a bomba – a street magician, another has recently opened a kimono rental store. And one night we go there with our Japanese friend Riko, who lives in Vancouver but is visiting family while we are in Kyoto. It’s so good to see her, and of course she translates for us. I also learn from her to say Miyoki-san and not just Miyoki.
Don and I
drink little but devour the food! Beautifully cooked grilled chicken on a plate with potato salad and lettuce with a vinaigrette dressing, and a side dish of rice, and another dish with small cabbage pieces cooked in an unnameable delicious sauce, and miso soup with pieces of fried tofu and white radish in it. When I express interest in the “pink blancmange” that the man next to me is eating we each get side dishes of that too; sesame sakura flavoured soft tofu with a very delicate flavour.
On our last night there Miyoki-san has a surprise for me. She is wearing a kimono, and has borrowed one for me. As soon as we walk in the door she dresses me in it.

At the end of the bar near the door there’s a bunch of silk flowers in a vase. When we leave, for the last time, she cries, and spontaneously grabs the flowers and hands them to me. I still have them. I’ll never forget her or her little restaurant in Kyoto.
There is nothing quite so elegant as a Japanese teahouse, even one busy with tourists. After exploring Nijo Castle we gravitate to Waraku-an teahouse in the grounds of the castle.
I order matcha green tea and cakes. When my order arrives I am thrilled to find that the three small sweet red bean cakes come in an exquisite gold box. It is a thing of beauty that fills me with joy. I want to take it home with me, but alas of course I cannot.
Don orders sweet red bean soup and tea, which it also served with thoughtful elegance.
In Japan there is always a striving for perfection, and an underlying reverence for a simple minimalist aesthetic that is inherent in the culture. Beauty is sought in even the most ordinary things. Such as a bowl of camellias at the entrance to Reikan-ji Temple,
or the placement of stones in a garden, such as these in the grounds of Nijo Castle,
or camellias placed on a water feature at Honen-in Temple.
It is found in more resplendent ways in ancient grand entrances such as this one at Nijo Castle,
or in the perfect placement of plants and stone lanterns in the garden of Honen-in Temple.
But back to more mundane things. We’re staying in a machiya, one of the tiny traditional row houses of old Kyoto, and on our first morning we set out to find grocery stores to stock our small kitchen with breakfast and lunch foods. We are not in a rush, and I’m feeling happy and enjoying trying to decipher all the labels of packages to be sure each contains what we want. I am absurdly pleased when I figure things out. Last visit to Japan I chose the wrong thing and ended up with yogurt instead of milk. And here are three other things I was wrong about in recording my 2018 visit to Japan:
Talking on transit. I wrote: People sit contained and silent with their legs together, nursing their bags on their laps. There is no, or very little conversation and what conversation there may be is brief and whispered. And then we got on a bus in rush hour. Well of course people talk! By Japanese standards it was downright noisy.
A big sign near Fushimi Inari Shrine. Oh this is a doozy. This is what I wrote: I see this woman on the main road leading down from Fushimi Inari Shrine. She stands next to a large red banner. Maybe she is from a religious sect or cult. She barely moves as she watches people streaming by. Most of the time her hands are in a prayer position. I’m annoyed that I didn’t think to photograph the entire banner. With the slogan I may have been able to find out something about her. As near as I can tell the banner says Many ca . . s are coming. Let’s walk in . . .Let’s walk in peace maybe?
Ha! This visit I got to see the banner. I laughed. What a fanciful imagination I have. I still have no idea who she is or what she represents. Google told me nothing.
Japanese people wearing kimonos to sightsee. I wrote: I had a long talk with the man behind the bar in the hostel in Kyoto. I asked him to look at a blog post I’d written about Japan to make sure I was not completely off base with it. He told me that the part I’d written about Japanese tourists dressing up in kimonos to go sightseeing is not right and that no Japanese person would ever do that. So when I start exploring the main sites of Kyoto I test this information. I ask people wearing kimonos where they are from. The most frequent answers are China, Korea, and Taiwan. Well, in fact it is quite common for Japanese women to wear kimonos,
and very common for Japanese women, and entire families, to dress up for the day when sightseeing, especially in Kanazawa and Kyoto. In all the following photos I can’t be sure these people are Japanese but it’s likely they are,
and I know for sure these two lovely young women are.
They were seated facing us on a train, and we got talking to them, and yes indeed, they are Japanese and had dressed up to go sightseeing for the day.
Which just goes to show that you shouldn’t believe everything a guy behind the bar in a hostel tells you.
Don and I are walking Riko from Romance back to the subway station when we suddenly see her. Like a bright exotic bird she walks with tiny practiced steps towards us on shoes that would break my ankles. She is the real thing. Definitely Japanese. Definitely in kimono. Definitely not sightseeing. This rare creature is off to attend her evening appointment. She does not look around, but focuses forward with a strange delicate yet powerful energy. She looks so frail and meek, but at the same time clearly says Don’t mess with me! She sees us, but does not see us. She concentrates only on her mission. She is a maiko, an apprentice geisha, and is oblivious to her surroundings. I, on the other hand, am thrilled. As thrilled as I would be to see a toucan in the jungle. Each event possible, exotic, and so rare. Always hoped for. And always a surprise when it happens. This young woman, in her natural habitat, the Gion neighbourhood of Kyoto, has fulfilled one of my dreams simply by the serendipity of her crossing my path. Japan never fails to bring me joy.
Directions to Romance Restaurant: https://www.google.co.nz/maps/place/1階+romance/@34.9982196,135.7718872,18z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x600108c756ec0001:0x1ece8dc1771a6cca!8m2!3d34.998848!4d135.7712596
It’s down a tiny alley on the north side of Matsubara-dori, just east of the Kamo River.
Next post: swinging back to Malaysia – the town of Kuching and the traditional dances of the tribes of Borneo.
All words and images by Alison Louise Armstrong unless otherwise noted
© Alison Louise Armstrong and Adventures in Wonderland – a pilgrimage of the heart, 2010-2020.
You too look beautiful and very happy. You resemble each other. The photos are stunning as always and the vibrant colors and life captured here make me feel happy.
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Thanks so much Cindy. I’m glad my photos brought happiness. Japan seems to engender that. It makes me smile just to think about it.
We *were* happy when that photo was taken. Well we are now too, but at the time Romance was such a fun place to be and I guess it shows. I think the twin buzzed heads contributes to us looking alike. 🙂
Alison
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Ha ha, Japan and India – definitely opposite ends of the stick. Must have been quite something to go from one to the other. Having your mind blown and blown again! I love your observations. It’s something I often think about – how near to the truth our perceptions are. Even if someone tells you it’s true, it doesn’t really mean anything. But curiosity is a wonderful thing. Love the photo in the Japanese wearing kimono section, of the couple sitting on a bench and the man wearing a wonderful shade of scarlet.
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I can’t believe that two of my favourite countries, both standouts for me, are Japan and India! They couldn’t be more different. Yes mind blown. And then blown again. It’s what we travel for isn’t it!
I was endlessly thrilled to see people, from wherever, wearing kimono. So bright and colourful, and an inherent desire to really have the full experience. I just loved it.
I’m pretty sure the couple sitting on the bench were Japanese. I think I may have asked them, but can’t remember for sure.
I agree about observations – we can watch and listen, and get a feeling or intuition about a place, but never really know how accurate it is, or how much it’s coloured by our own ideas and expectations. It’s absolutely the reason I asked the man in the hostel to read this post to see if my perceptions were valid.
https://alisonanddon.com/2018/05/10/japan-a-revelation/
I tend now to pay a lot more attention to how place feels, and am much more observant than when I first started traveling. Oh and I’m relentlessly curious lol. Thanks Tracey.
Alison
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It’s finds like the Romance restaurant that really add depth to a trip. When I find such a gem, I often eat there almost every day. Some may say that’s not experiencing a place, and it’s better to try a lot, but once you’ve found a good thing, looking for “better” is a waste of energy. I suppose that could apply to many things in life. Stunning photos, as always. Anything Japanese instantly centers me. Hope you both are well.—Julie
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Thanks so much Julie. I find the same with Japan. There’s a spirit to this country that seems to be very calming.
I agree with you about finds like Romance. It was such a happy immersion into the local culture that we only had because we kept returning. We became part of the regulars by being regular, and l yes searching for anything else would have been a waste of energy (eg the night we went to the ramen restaurant). We also did the same in Goreme in Turkey – found a place near home and ate there every night – good service, excellent food, good prices. It made no sense to look further.
We are both well. Hope you are too!
Alison
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Experiences like what you had at the Romance is really what travel is all about, isn’t it! I so enjoyed reading about how over the ten days you became regulars. Of course your figure skating story warmed my heart too.
Great photos as usual. I love the warmth coming out of all the faces at the Romance and those little girls with the fur collars are adorable. I’m happy you got to see the apprentice geisha with your own eyes. I wonder how long you have to practice to be able to walk gracefully in those shoes!
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Thanks so much Caroline. Romance was such a great experience. I’m so glad we kept going back. I think Miyoki-san was in tears when we left because our presence broke up the routine of ordinary life for her. We were something new and different for them, and they for us, so we all had a lot of fun despite the language barrier. And for me it was a real experience of Japanese culture instead of just observing, which as you say, is what travel is all about.
I’m thrilled I got the shot of those little girls – so cute. And yes, seeing the geisha was really special. I too wondered about the shoes! Lots of practice I imagine. It reminds me of an episode of Next Top Model years ago when the world-be models had to do a runway walk in impossible shoes. Not all of them were successful lol.
Alison
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Hi…long time…hope all well with you both!
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Hi Vidur. Welcome back! All is well with us. We are at home in Vancouver living a quiet life. We visit with friends outdoors while keeping a bit of a distance from them. I hope all is well with you too! It is strange times we are living in.
Alison
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Thank you so much for your reply, Alison. Good to know you are well…though I am sure you are missing your adventures, as are we, through yours. Yes, all well…so far so good…seems an apt phrase in these times. Hope things return to a more normal state soon. Stay safe and be well.
Regards,
Vidur
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What a treat to see the apprentice geisha! And to find the Romance Restaurant. Great memories.
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The geisha, and our time at Romance restaurant were definitely both highlights of this visit to Japan. I’d love to go back if we ever can travel again, but then there are soooo many places I want to go to. I don’t think my curiosity about the world will ever be satisfied lol.
Alison
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It is always a dilemma, go back to a place we love or go somewhere new! We just about always pick exploring someplace new. xo
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Ah this post made me miss Kyoto and the food and the overall attention to aesthetics and order. Love the photos of the geisha. We encountered two geishas in a fancy hotel at the train station where we went to store our bags for a few hours. The “real thing” is so clearly that … an air of uniqueness and yes focus, compared with the tourists or locals who dress in kimonos for special occasions. You know it when you experience it. Nice to see the photos of you and Don
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I just fell in love with Japan, for the attention to aesthetics and order as you say, and of course the food (heaven) and the overall feel of the culture. I’d love to go back. I agree re the geisha – when you see the real thing there’s no mistaking it. Lucky you to see two of them. The only other time we saw any was when we went to one of the annual dance performances, and we saw a few coming and going in preparation for the performance, as we waited in line to go in. I’ll post about it eventually. And also the tea ceremony that we attended before the performance – I was able to take photos of that but definitely not of the performance.
I don’t often post photos of either of us, but we were having such a good time in Romance that I had to share.
Alison
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This post really makes me miss Japan. It’s amazing that everywhere you look, the Japanese (or most of them) seem to put so much attention into details, whether it’s food, handicrafts, architecture, gardens, or other mundane things people from other parts of the world often take for granted. Reading about your experience at Romance warmed my heart — so much genuine kindness.
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I would love to go back to Japan. You’re right about the attention to detail – in everything. It develops patience, focus, and concentration. Perhaps that’s why the country seems so calm. And there’s very much a community-first ethic rather than me-first. The experience at Romance was really special. Totally lucked out there.
Alison
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You look wonderfully relaxed and happy in your restaurant, Alison. My eye couldn’t help but be drawn to the Pringles on the end of the table. Seems everybody likes them. 🙂 🙂 The best thing for me is seeing all those people out in kimonos. Amazing to be part of that culture.
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Thanks Jo. We were for sure very relaxed and happy that evening in Romance, and that whole trip to Japan. Although there was much we wanted to do and achieve it still felt like we could take our time – a nice way to travel.
I hadn’t even noticed the Pringles!
I loved seeing all the people in kimonos – so colourful, and such a lovely way to keep Japanese tradition alive.
Alison
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Aren’t small bars in Japan just GREAT? I wish I could fly out back to Japan just to hit the little bars.
I loved the photos of you two guys. The way you smile is the way I’d like to for ever!
Fabrizio
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Yes! I too would go just to hit the little bars. I’m so glad we discovered Romance and that we could go often enough to become regulars.
I don’t often put photos of us on the blog but had to share this one because it so perfectly summed up our experience there. As for my smile – thank you. I guess I’m just basically a happy person.
Alison
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The Romance Restaurant… what a find, Alison. Special. And I really like the grounds of Nijo Caste. –Curt
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Romance was an amazing find; one of those experiences that makes travel so special. And Nijo is just beautiful. Maybe I’ll post more about it some time.
Alison
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There is nothing i love more than the connection we make with people as we travel. Your description of the flowers you still have reminds me of so many of those wonderful encounters we have had the good fortune to have. As always your photos are a joy to see Alison, including the treasure of encountering a geisha.
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Thanks so much Sue. Seeing the geisha was such an exciting moment. It is really so rare to see them. And I agree, it’s the connection we make with people, regardless of the language barrier, that makes travel so special. Like you we’ve had many sweet encounters, but Romance really was a standout.
Alison
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Oh, why have I not been to Japan yet? And when can I go? It is a country after my own heart. When I do go to Kyoto, I will have printed out the photo of you and Miyoki-san, and I will carry it into the Romance restaurant to earn us some goodwill!
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Oh I would love it if this could happen! I hope you get to Kyoto. And I hope you get to Romance and show Miyoki-san the photo. That would be so wonderful. And you could give her a hug for me (if hugs are ever allowed again. 😦 ) Japan is a dream country.
Alison
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This post warmed my heart, of course! Romance Restaurant – what a find! It’s always such a joy to become a local when you travel. When I first moved to Japan, I lived in Nagoya for a few months, and befriended the owner of a local wine bar where I frequently found myself for that dose of localness in a new, strange place. I can also attest that many Japanese people dress up in kimonos to go sightseeing in historic parts of the country! In Kyoto, a lot of the tourists are probably foreigners, but in Kanazawa we get a lot of domestic travelers who love to dress up and see the sights. And that maiko sighting!!! OMG!
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Oh I’m so glad Mo. My second trip to Japan, with Don, was so lovely. I remember you’d moved to Tokyo by then I think so we couldn’t meet up again. And yes, Romance was really special. The whole experience there really added to the flavour of that trip. I’m so glad we kept going back there night after night so we became regulars. Miyoki-san was a bit upset on the night that it was full that there was not room for us.
I remember you telling me in Kanazawa that Japanese women liked to dress up to go sightseeing, and then that guy in the hostel said they would never do that (he was so certain!) and then every one I asked said they were from elsewhere so I didn’t know what to believe! Anyway I finally got to the bottom of it LOL.
Yah! The maiko! That was really special! Such a rare and beautiful moment. A blessing.
Alison
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Great post all around, Alison, I really enjoyed it. 🙂 To be a regular somewhere (and to be treated as such) on vacation is such a gift, but one that you guys obviously deserve being curious, open, great people. 🙂 I loved your self reflection, too. And I learned a lot. Thank you!
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Thanks so much Peggy. Romance was such a lucky discovery, and I’m so glad we kept going back – it was overall a really special experience. I’m glad you enjoyed the post. And thank you for your lovely compliments.
Alison xo
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I loved reading about Romance Restaurant. Their happy, generous spirit shows in the photos – great a story. It was a great idea to go back to your old posts about Japan to see what might have been wrong. Transparency in blogging! 😉 And what wonderful photos of people in kimonos. They’re all interesting. The light in the one of two women smiling is beautiful. The last one, with the juxtaposition between traditional and modern, is brilliant. (It looks like you used some selective saturation in the last two images, too, a perfect technique that is for those images).
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Thanks so much Lynn. Romance was such a great find. I didn’t actually look back through posts so much as become aware as we were sightseeing on my second trip to Kyoto. I just kept going: Oops! Gotta fix that! I thought the one about the road sign was so funny. I thought she was with some kind of religious group or something. I wish I could find out about her (or him?) but google revealed nothing. Yes, I did use selective saturation – I really wanted to subject to stand out. I’ve done it also in a couple of other photos – the one with the 2 women walking away and the one above it.
Alison
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Pretty amazing post. I just stumbled upon your post and wished to say that I’ve really enjoyed reading your article.
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Thanks so much Luciano. I’m glad you enjoyed it. There’s one more recent post than this one – about Kuching, Malaysia (link above), and I’ll be posting about Rishikesh, India in the next couple of days.
Cheers, Alison
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Pretty nice post. I stumbled upon your article and wished to say that I’ve really enjoyed browsing your article.
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Thanks so much Randee. I’m glad you enjoyed it. Lots of posts coming as always.
Cheers, Alison
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