Sentences with phrase «traditional ryokans»

Go soft on adventure but hard on culture with this selection of popular cultural tours offering unique experiences from overnight stays in traditional ryokans and riads to village visits and culinary delights.
We provide expert guidance on the best luxury hotels to book for a range of tastes and budgets — from extravagant tented camps in Africa and traditional Ryokans in Japan, to picturesque palaces in Europe and stylish urban boutique hotels around the world.
Traditional Japanese lodges, with straw tatami mats and roll - up futons for sleeping, can be booked from 5,000 yen per person, though be advised, upscale traditional ryokan can be much more expensive (www.jpinn.com).
Traditional ryokan stay with kaiseki meal.
Relax in the soothing hot springs of Kotohira, spend the night in a traditional ryokan and contemplate world peace at the final remnants... Read More
Relax in the soothing hot springs of Kotohira, spend the night in a traditional ryokan and contemplate world peace at the final remnants of Hiroshima's atomic blast.
Shirk the five star Western hotel and opt for the traditional ryokan, a favorite of the Japanese for centuries.

Not exact matches

I then use it as the foundation of a Japanese - style salmon rice bowl worthier of a ryokan (a traditional Japanese B&B) than my New York apartment.
In Nozawa - Onsen, it's about ryokans, or traditional Japanese B&B s. And the rustic Kiriya Ryokan, on one of the village's main streets, came straight out of central casting.
Soak in hot springs, stay in traditional mountain inns and ryokans, and experience the diversity of Japan's fine cuisine — from the lively pubs of Osaka to delightful, locally sourced meals along the Kumano Kodo.
A ryokan is a traditional Japanese inn that is mostly located around hot springs.
The California sun shines a bit brighter where famed restaurateur Nobu Matsuhisa chose to build his fourth hotel, the first in the style of a traditional Japanese ryokan.
Our home for the next two nights in the Iya Valley is a ryokan, or traditional Japanese inn, where inviting, on - site hot spring baths offer a chance to relax and rejuvenate.
Ryokan are traditional inns found across Japan.
More affordable and simpler than ryokan, minshuku tend to have smaller guestrooms, shared bathroom facilities, and any included meals (traditional, local, and delicious) are served in a communal dining room.
Similar to ryokan, they have traditional features like tatami floors, futon beds, and Japanese - style baths.
Ryokans tend to offer traditional Japanese dishes as well.
Ryokans are traditional Japanese inns with intimate settings and basic bedding styles (pillows are filled with buckwheat and mats and futons replace mattresses), and are often more affordable that traditional accommodations.
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