Tokyo Izakaya Culture — After-Work Drinking
Izakaya (居酒屋) are Japanese gastropubs — casual drinking establishments serving small plates (yakitori, edamame, fried chicken, sashimi, grilled fish) designed for sharing alongside beer, sake, and shochu. Izakaya are central to Tokyo's social fabric — coworkers gather after work (nominication, 飲みニケーション, drinking communication), groups celebrate, and locals unwind. The atmosphere is loud, smoky (less so post-smoking ban), and convivial — strangers toast ('kanpai!') and conversations overflow between tables.
The izakaya experience is quintessentially Japanese — order rounds of drinks and small dishes throughout the evening (2-3 hours), splitting the bill equally at the end. Chains (Torikizoku, Watami) offer budget options (¥300/dish, ¥300/drink), while independent izakaya emphasize regional cuisine and craft sake. The unspoken rule: drink slowly, eat steadily, and stay until someone suggests the 'nijikai' (second party at another bar).
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