A Trip to Meidi-Ya! ★★★★☆

(Not that I’m actually reviewing grocery stores, mind you, but you never know what I’ll get up to!)


An overhead view of the groceries I brought home, including two A&W root beers, a can of Pass-o-Guava, a loaf of bread, a bag of cornmeal, a pack of thinly-sliced ham, a jar of milk jam, some butcher's twine, and my first head of romanesco.
Sometimes when I’m feeling fancy, I’ll come home heavy with bags, but low on cash…today my knee hurt.

Once a month, when I have to go to one of my many clinic appointments, I visit a Meidi-Ya import grocery nearby. These days, chronic pain and a fairly debilitating panic disorder usually mean groceries delivered to my doorstep, but since I already have to haul my majestic ass halfway across town, I figure that I may as well enjoy stopping in and dreaming of having enough room—and enough money!—for everything from row upon row of beautiful, matching jars, filled with every sort and variety of herbs and spices, to imported cheese from around the world, and one of Tokyo’s hardest-to-find treasures: frozen ravioli!

For those who aren’t familiar with it, in a lot of ways Meidi-Ya is your garden variety, overpriced import shop in Japan. I’m sure the wine section alone pays the store’s rent many times over, picking the pockets of Japan’s more upscale immigrant population, desperately searching for a taste of home at three times the price. In my case, in addition to the occasional sweets and treats from my erstwhile homeland, I like that they have a larger baking section than the average store…even if the products I so desire do still come in the ridiculously tiny bags so common in Tokyo supermarkets.


A basket of purple cauliflower and yellow cauliflower.
Knowing these cauliflower sadly don’t cook up to the same color is the only thing that keeps me from buying them…now.

They also have the most gorgeous and vivid displays of fruit and vegetables, where I usually spend most of my visit, shifting my weight from leg to leg…just pondering. As a lifelong lover of vegetables, I find it a challenge not to spend my whole budget on a bunch or two of beautiful, multicolored carrots or teeny tiny jewel-like tomatoes, positioned just so. The way the light glints off of them, it’s as if they’re calling out to me to take them home, even if I know they’d all be gone in only a few bites.

(Fear not! I haven’t succumbed yet!)


Two large square boxes, depicting a giant yellow-orange citrus fruit and bearing Japanese writing, have similarly-sized fruits atop them.
Gigantic yuzu from Kumamoto, endorsed by the beloved Kumamon itself…but what isn’t these days?!

Today’s point of interest was yuzu which were literally larger than my (admittedly small~ish) head. While I am a fan of Japan’s patron citrus fruit, I don’t like it quite that much, so I was only slightly tempted to buy only that, and leave the store toting my specially boxed prize. I was, however, greatly tempted to give in to my weirdo foreigner urges and risk arrest by dancing around with one of ’em on my head, like a lone-fruited Carmen Miranda.

Thank the gawds for bad knees!


What’s your favorite grocery store in Tokyo, import or otherwise? And what can you never resist buying? Let me know in the comments!

3 responses to “A Trip to Meidi-Ya! ★★★★☆”

  1. […] I mentioned in a previous post, I stop in to Meidi-Ya once a month, and browse the shelves to see what catches my eye. I always […]

    Like

  2. TIL there’s such a thing as milk jam.

    I LOVE yuzu and I’m a sucker for anything endorsed by Kumamon, so I admire your resolve in resisting this! 😀

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Milk jam is Japan’s (not remotely as good) answer to dulce de leche…but whenever I eat it out of desperation, I simply wish they had actual CANS of sweetened condensed milk so that I could simmer them into the real thing!

      Like

Leave a reply to Anonymous Cancel reply

it Me!
A selfie of Scout, sitting in the back seat of a car, with a smile on her face, the window rolled down, and her blonde hair blowing in the wind.

I’m Scout. I live in a really small apartment in Tokyo, with a ridiculously tiny kitchen, a wee balcony garden, an adorable little asshole of a cat, and a relatively normal~sized husband. 

And honestly? On any given day, I’m just trying to make lunch happen…



• follow me on instagram!
• check out my twitter!
• i even have a tumblr!
• …and a pinterest!
(& maybe a problem?)


wanna buy me a cookbook? click here, please & thank you!

how about some kitchen stuff i probably don’t need? click here!

One-Time
Monthly
Yearly

Make a one-time donation

Make a monthly donation

Make a yearly donation

Choose an amount

¥500
¥1,000
¥5,000
¥5
¥15
¥100
¥5
¥15
¥100

Or enter a custom amount

¥

Your contribution is appreciated.

Your contribution is appreciated.

Your contribution is appreciated.

DonateDonate monthlyDonate yearly
Thank you so much for stopping by & taking the time to read! It really means a lot to me!