Matsuri Days (2): Nebuta Matsuri

Aomori Beyond the Nebuta Matsuri: Nature, Water, and Local Flavors

The Nebuta may be the most famous tourist draw in Aomori, but the prefecture has lots more to offer. Visitors can enjoy the unique flavors of the local food year round, or relax away from the big city at Lake Towada or on the upper reaches of the Oirase River.

● The Upper Oirase River

● Towada Shokudo

● Towada Shokudo

● Kamikōchi Shokudo

● Michi No Eki Shichinohe

● Michi No Eki Shichinohe

 

The Many Faces of the Oirase River

Two hours’ drive from Aomori City, the upper reaches of the Oirase River are the perfect place to relax and recharge your batteries. The road takes you through rural farmland, the greenery growing deeper and thicker as the Oirase River comes into view, draining the waters of Lake Towada into the Pacific Ocean. The Yakeyama bus stop, and the clutch of hotels and shops surrounding it, mark the entrance to the mountain-bound upper reaches of the Oirase River. Follow the curving undulations of the stream in the direction of Lake Towada, and you’ll be rewarded with a fresh panorama around every bend. The river is turbulent at Samidare No Nagare [Samidare Rapids], but a little further down the road at the Ishigedo Rest Area, the river has calmed into a gentle shimmer. Local volunteer guides are eager to share their knowledge of the area. Further upstream you’ll see the powerful Asura No Nagare [Asura Rapids]—a popular spot for amateur photographers that appears on numerous posters advertising the attractions of the region. Past Shirakinu No Taki [White Silk Falls] comes a series of waterfalls, each presenting a different aspect of the Oirase River. Continue past one last breathtaking scene at Chōshi Ōtaki [Chōshi Falls] you come to the mystical shores of the tranquil Lake Towada.

 

Towada Shokudō: The Ultimate Place to Try Lake Towada’s Fish

Lake Towada is famous for one delicacy above all others: freshly caught himemasu, or sockeye salmon. The shores of the lake are crowded with souvenir shops and restaurants selling himeyasu in various forms. One particularly good place to sample the local specialty is the Towada Shokudō restaurant, where options include tempura-fried himeyasu and the marinated himeyasu rice bowl.

In the heart of the  Lake Towada hot springs district not far from the banks of the lake, you’ll find Kamikōchi Shokudō, famous for Towada barayaki [pan–broiled beef & onion], another local delicacy. Serving a menu that has remained unchanged since the restaurant opened in 1972, Kamikōchi Shokudō recently came to prominence after its barayaki won a nationwide local foods competition. The mother-and-daughter management team say that local ingredients are behind their success: “The secret to barayaki is the onions, which soak up the juices from the meat. We always use only Aomori onions—250 grams to every 100 grams of meat.” In addition to their renowned barayaki, Kamikōchi Shokudō offers dishes made with locally sourced wild mountain vegetables and mushrooms.

From the center of Towada City, National Highway No. 4 leads to the new Shichinohe Towada Shinkansen station, part of an extension to the shinkansen network that opened in 2011. At the “Michi no Eki Shichinohe” rest stop and information center in front of the station, Keiran offers up more home-style cooking. We enjoyed an egg-shaped mochi (stick rice) dumpling filled with bean paste, served in a soup. The refined taste of the konbu seaweed and shiitake mushroom broth complemented the sweetness of the mochi perfectly. This traditional dish has undergone something of a resurgence since Keiran began serving it. Other specialties well worth trying include soba-mochi, made from buckwheat flour.

Related Tags

Tōhoku tourism Aomori Oirase Lake Towada

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