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An Insider guide to Tokyo's Tsukiji fish Market

Tsukiji market mapCaterer Reiko Yoshikawa points us toward her favorite parts of Tsukiji market.
In normal times, Tokyo’s world-renowned Tsukiji wholesale fish market is crowded with gawping tourists out for an early-morning glimpse of the colorful tuna auctions and a taste of fresh-from-the-ocean sushi for breakfast. However, the March 11 earthquake and tsunami mean things in Tsukiji are now anything but normal.
On my recent visit, two weeks after the earthquake, I was the first visitor many traders had seen since the disaster. People went out of their way to welcome me and took my being there as a sign that life as they used to know it might return and, along with it, the crowds of pesky tourists.
For my stroll around the post-March 11 Tsukiji, I was joined by Reiko Yoshikawa, a caterer who uses the market as the main food source of her business, and we took a look at what insiders truly love about Tokyo’s celebrated market.

Peering inside 

“Tsukiji has a wide variety of the best of the best, including vegetables, fruit, beef, poultry and of course, fish -- the specialty stores also make it unique,” says Reiko.

Vegetable shop
Yoshikawa visits Takako Fujimoto, the owner of Fujimoto Shoten, a vegetable shop in the outer market.
The market as a whole is split between the inner market, Jonai Shijo, and the outer market, Jogai Shijo. The inner market, where the fish is auctioned, gets going around 3 a.m., with the busiest time between 5 a.m. and 6 a.m. By 9:30 a.m., the business for the day is over at a time when most folk are only just starting work.
The oft-overlooked part of Tsukiji is the outer market. This area surrounds the fish sales and sells a mix of seasonal fruit and vegetables, kitchen utensils and kitchenware, beans, spices, meat, knives and fish. It is open from 6 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. There is no bargaining and almost all payments are cash.

Melon auction
Melon farmers can't wait for the daily auction of their pricey pickings.
Tourists are usually unaware of the high-end melon auction, which takes place at 9:30 a.m. These are the notoriously super-expensive melons sold in department stores for up to ¥10,000 a pair.
You’ll find the melon fans in the fruit and vegetable warehouse across the street from the inner fish market -- just look for the lime-green metal bleachers.


Read more: An insider guide to Tokyo's Tsukiji fish market | CNNGo.com http://www.cnngo.com/tokyo/visit/insider-guide-tokyos-tsukiji-fish-market-117910#ixzz1Q5ruiuVw

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