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Hotori Arashiyama is a high school girl who works part-time as a waitress at Seaside coffee shop in the Maruko shopping district. One day, the owner, Uki Isobata, comes up with a secret plan to make the restaurant prosperous.
At the former site of Celebrations on the Avenue, Arashiyama Japanese sushi restaurant and steakhouse has opened on Endicott's Washington Avenue.
% Arabica expanded to Thailand in June 2020, opening a 250m 2 store in Bangkok's Iconsiam center which was described as the city's most popular specialty coffee cafe. [45] At the time, it was the brand's 48th global outpost. [45] The first U.S. cafe opened in Dumbo, Brooklyn on June 11, 2021. [11]
The Bamboo Forest, Arashiyama Bamboo Grove, or Sagano Bamboo Forest is a natural bamboo forest in Arashiyama, Kyoto, Japan. It consists mostly of mōsō bamboo (Phyllostachys edulis) and has several pathways for tourists and visitors. The Ministry of the Environment considers it a part of the soundscape of Japan. [1]
Maid Sama! (Japanese: 会長はメイド様!, Hepburn: Kaichō wa Meido-sama!, lit."The Class President Is a Maid!") is a shōjo manga series by Hiro Fujiwara.The story centers around Misaki Ayuzawa, the student council president of the previously all-boys high school who is particularly strict on the boys, and her relationship with her man Takumi Usui, a classmate who knows the secret that ...
Kitcho (Kanji: 吉兆 Hiragana: きっちょう lit. "good omen") is a kaiseki (Japanese haute cuisine) restaurant chain group and one of the most famous ones in Japan.It was founded by Teiichi Yuki in 1930 in Osaka, and today runs restaurants in Osaka, Kyoto, Kobe, Fukuoka and Tokyo.
Arashiyama (嵐山, Storm Mountain) is a district on the western outskirts of Kyoto, Japan. It also refers to the mountain across the Ōi River , which forms a backdrop to the district. Arashiyama is a nationally designated Historic Site and Place of Scenic Beauty .
The Saga Arashiyama Museum of Arts and Culture (SAMAC; formerly known as Shigureden (時雨殿)) is a museum in Arashiyama, Kyoto, Japan, centered on the Ogura Hyakunin Isshu anthology of waka poems compiled by Fujiwara no Teika in the 13th century.