At
the recent opening of the beautiful new Uwajimaya store close to
downtown Bellevue, a sense of celebration was decidedly in the air. The
former Overlake location had closed only nine days earlier, but
Uwajimaya fulfills such a unique need in the Eastside community that
they were really missed.
Photo: the new Bellevue store
"Because of the growth on the Eastside and in our customers, we’ve
wanted to enlarge and update our Uwajimaya Bellevue store for several
years," stated Uwajimaya CEO and founder’s daughter, Tomoko Moriguchi
Matsuno.
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Uwajimaya
699 120th Avenue NE
Bellevue, WA 98005
Phone: 425-747-9012
600 5th
Ave S
Seattle, WA 98104
206-624-6248
501 S Grady Wy
Renton, WA 98057
425-277-1635
10500 SW
Beaverton-Hillsdale Hwy
Beaverton, OR 97005
503-643-4512
www.uwajimaya.com
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At precisely 11:00 a.m. on March 25th, Tomoko Matsuno and
store manager Hiroshi Hibi stood waiting to greet their customers. After
a quick roll call of departments as to their readiness, the doors
quietly opened to the applause and cheers of those gathered outside.
The new store at 35,000 square feet is 50% larger than the old one,
with wider aisles, more check-out stands and bigger displays. Each
department offers extensive selections of food products not only from
Japan but from Asian neighbors as well.
This upscale relocation happens just 83 years after Fujimatsu
Moriguchi began a small business in Tacoma selling fishcakes from his
truck to Japanese laborers in logging and fishing camps around Puget
Sound. He called his fledgling company Uwajima-ya, named for the town
where he learned his trade and followed by the word "ya" which means
"store" in his native tongue. At the same time, his wife Sadako opened
the first small Uwajimaya store in Tacoma.
From these very humble beginnings grew a highly successful mini-chain
of Japanese specialty supermarkets and food processing divisions which
today still remain family owned and operated. Uwajimaya, Inc. currently
employs 400 people in Washington and Oregon.
The design of the new Bellevue store is a collaboration between Tomoko Matsuno and Tom Phillips of Phillips Enterprises. It is brightly lit,
spacious in design and physically much easier to shop in than the old
location.
"The challenge was to make the store shopper-friendly and completely
exciting throughout. I believe we have accomplished this. Uwajimaya is
very strong in fish and deli, though not to dismiss their strength in
meat and produce. With this expertise, we decided to place the two
strongest departments in the front (deli) and back (seafood), filling in
with the perimeter departments. Asian gifts are an automatic draw for
their stores and can be placed pretty much anywhere," said Tom Phillips,
www.foodmarketdesigns.com
The
problem, if it can really be called a problem, lies in the fact that
there is so much to choose from. Each department is brimming with
product and choices. For seasoned cooks familiar with the various Asian
cuisines and ingredients, a trip to Uwajimaya is fascinating and
rewarding, but for a beginner it is positively overwhelming. Spend an
hour or so just wandering the aisles, reading labels, asking questions
and just plain imagining what your next meal could be.
The first stop on a leisurely tour of this colorful store is the
produce department. In addition to popular veggies and fruits, you will
also find, among many others, sinqua, oppo and moqua (Chinese okra,
bottle gourd and fuzzy melon, respectively), and, of course,
dragonfruits.
Next comes the delicious aromas from Deli-cious, the place to purchase
ready-to-eat Asian food in many guises from small bites to a feast. At
Chef’s Corner, prices range from $1.99 for skewered spicy chicken to
$28.99 for black cod kasuzuki. Under the BBQ sign hang pork loins, spare
ribs, roasted pork bellies and ducks. Fresh Choices brings a wide
variety of prepared Asian foods from steam tables, all made with zero
trans-fat oils.
Sadako’s Café is an oasis in the bustling Deli-cious section of the
store where you can take your purchases, sit down, eat and enjoy. This
café is named for founder Sadako Moriguchi. After Fujimatsu’s death in
1962, she continued to attend to and communicate with customers at the
Seattle store for the next 40 years.
Tomoko
Matsuno just beams when you mention seafood to her. She is so proud of
the new seafood department with live lobster tanks, Dungeness crab and
tilapia; shellfish tanks of manila clams, geoducks and nine different
kinds of oysters from Kushi to Kumamoto. On the trio of icy slabs is a
dramatic display of well-labeled whole fish, and in the refrigerated
showcases are styles and cuts of a wide variety of fish. The Sashimi
Island is self-explanatory, being a large view prep area surrounded by
refrigerated cases filled with assorted cuts and varieties of sushi
grade raw fish.
Uwajimaya offers many delicious and tempting choices for the home
cook to prepare quick meals without a lot of fuss and time-consuming
preparation. Freezers and refrigerated cases in most departments are
filled with snacks both sweet and savory, entrees and desserts. The meat
counter offers marinated ready-to-cook meats while surrounding showcases
feature meats sliced and cubed for specific recipes: bulgogi, sukiyaki,
shabu shabu and hot pot. When rounding out a "homemade meal," don’t
forget to visit the beer and wine department with the wow selection of
sake.
In an historical side note, the 1962 World’s Fair in Seattle marked
the beginning of the popular Uwajimaya gift and kitchen departments
when, in order to capture attention, Moriguchi added non-food items to
his inventory. Today Uwajimaya stocks a wide selection of tableware,
cookbooks, cards, cosmetics, toys, origami and an extensive selection of
rice cookers.
Visit Uwajimaya’s website for ongoing news from all stores,
directions, recipes, a glossary of ingredients and details of Senior
Tuesdays 8 a.m. – 11 a.m., and College Night Fridays 6 p.m. – 10 p.m.