Singaporeans are weird. Ask them to visit the Toa Payoh wet market in Singapore at 7 am and they’ll complain, but ask them to visit the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo at 3 am and they’ll be clamouring ...
Staff at the Plat Tsukiji tourist information center in Tokyo are all smiles these days, kept busy by the renewed influx of visitors to Tsukiji’s iconic outer market. “Compared to the height of the ...
Last year incoming Tokyo Governor Koike put a hold on the long-planned move of the fish wholesaling hub in Tsukiji to a new home in Toyosu. This June she finally approved the move to Toyosu, but she ...
Tokyo’s central fish market, Tsukiji, is the largest fish market in the world, with more than 60,000 registered employees conducting business over its 57 acres. Everyone who works there has to eat, ...
Tsukiji Market is Japan's oldest and most famous fish market, and is best known for the unique meals visitors can have here. The wholesale tuna portion of the market moved to Toyosu, but Tsukiji still ...
Tokyo’s Tsukiji fish market was once the largest fish market on Earth. It was a bustling distribution center that supplied Tokyo with most of its seafood. Established in 1935 after the Great Kanto ...
This compact nine-seater restaurant is located on the outer rim of Tsukiji Market, facing Harumi-dori, so it’s the perfect place to go to dodge the market crowds. You’ll find that Tsukiji Koromo Sushi ...
This morning at the famed Tsukiji Fish Market in Tokyo, the first auction of 2018 saw a massive bluefina tuna fetch a hefty $323,000. The fish weighed 890 pounds, Reuters reports, bringing its price ...
“Tsukiji Wonderland” is a documentary about the history and workings of Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo. It features interviews with renowned sushi chef Jiro Ono (from “Jiro Dreams of Sushi”) and René ...
I kicked off my first day in Japan by waking up super early (4 a.m.!) and heading down to the world-famous Tsukiji Fish Market. A tradition that dates back to the Edo period, the riverside market is ...
As historic Tsukiji market closes, fishmongers mourn. Takako Arai's earliest memories are of Tsukiji, playing hide-and-seek with her brother in the concrete maze of Tokyo's sprawling fish market.