Vivo! Beer + Dining Bar in Ikebukuro

Vivo! Beer + Dining Bar

The entrance to Vivo, adjacent to a Starbucks.

Today I took advantage of having to go to Shinjuku for an errand to check out the well-regarded Vivo! Beer + Dining Bar in Ikebukuro on my way home. (Or did I take advantage of a desire to drink good beer to do the errand?)

Vivo! is most definitely a beer bar, with 20 different beers on tap as well as bottles of import beer to choose from. I was there on a Sunday around 4pm, and there were about five or six other customers, with a few more trickling in as it got closer to evening. The place is non-smoking with a cubby hole looking booth for people to have a puff, and there’s free wifi (ask one of the staff for the password).

Kin-Oni Pale Ale

Kin-Oni Pale Ale, in "Regular Size"

One thing I was ambivalent about were the sizes on offer, “Regular” which equates to 360ml, and “Half” which is 285ml, which was ¥150 cheaper than the Regular. In other words, whether you’re talking American or British pints, what’s on offer is neither. On the other hand, the prices did seems to reflect that you were getting less than a pint (at least compared to other places I’ve been to in high-rent areas like this one), and the smaller sizes can help to make even a high ABV IPA a bit more sessionable.

Of the 20 beers on tap, 14 of them were from Japanese, a great ratio if you ask me, especially when all with the exception of a Ebisu were from domestic craft breweries. Breweries like Sankt Gallen, Baird (which also makes a special IPA for Vivo), Coedo, Yoho, and Tamamura were represented, amongst others. (On the import side, you could get two kinds of Lagunitas, a Rogue, a Southern Tier, plus the ubiquitous Guinness.) You can see the full list of 20 (in Japanese and English) at Vivo!’s blog. Based on past blog posts, it would seem they change the lineup (slightly) every two weeks or so. Bottles were listed in the back of the menu, but I didn’t pay too much attention as I figured why go bottle when there are so many choices on tap.

For my first beer, I purposely chose something from a new-to-me brewery, in this case the Kin-Oni Pale Ale from Noboribetsu, a hot spring town about a hour from Sapporo in Hokkaido (and not a good enough web presence to link to, if I’m being honest). It was very good, well worth the ¥1000 yen I paid even though it wasn’t a full pint.

Vivo's What's on Tap menu spread

More beer than you shake a stick at!

I did use the small size to rationalize getting another beer, and this time I chose the Harvest Ale from Southern Tier, a brewery from New York I’ve often heard of and seen in the shops but had yet to try. It was also rather tasty, though it didn’t knock my socks off the way the Kin-Oni did.

I did not order any food but judging from the menu it seemed reasonably priced, but can’t comment on anything like portions or taste. And speaking of the menu, I like how they have all 20 beers on tap spread over two pages, with a fair amount of information or commentary about each beer. While this is in Japanese, important things like the beer name, brewery, and beer style are printed in English, a nice plus.

Here’s a link to the location in Google Maps.

Vivo! Beer + Dining Bar

A quiet Sunday afternoon at Vivo!


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Baird Taprooms

Baird Nakameguro Taproom - Bakayayo

I think (!) this was the Bakayaro I had at the Nakameguro Taproom

Had a chance to visit two different Baird Brewing taprooms recently, the one in Yokohama (Bashamichi), and the one in Harajuku. It was really a coincidence that I happened to visit them both in the same week, but who am I to question such an alignment of the stars.

The Bashamichi location has two floors plus a roof garden, but I never saw anything but the first, which just has stools around a bar counter. I visited on a Sunday, around 8 p.m. at night, and there were about 7 other folks downstairs. I had a Lagunitas IPA, which is one of two guest beers on tap (the other was a Southern Tier beer, IIRC), and a limited time only Belgian Ale from Baird. Unfortunately, my visit was at the end of a long day that included a visit to Yokohama’s Oktoberfest, plus dinner and typical draft lager at an izakaya, so I can’t really comment on the quality of the beer. What I can say is that the staff was very friendly and I could see that if I lived close enough, this could easily become my “local”. I could see from the menu that their food selection was geared towards American BBQ, which would have been lost on me (but I was not in mind to eat anything anyway do no big deal).

Baird Nakameguro Taproom - Drink Menu

The menu at the Nakameguro Taproom

At the Harajuku location a few nights later, I had their “Harajuku Ale” (batch 16, fwiw), plus a Suruga IPA and a Teikoku IPA (the included pic obviously not from the same night). Loved all of them, especially the special Ale. And the IPAs were rather better than the bottled versions I have had. After my disappointing visits to a few breweries in America during a recent trip home, it was refreshing (and relieving) to know that those experiences were probably the exception rather than the norm. The Harajuku taproom is just one floor, with tables plus a counter bar, and with food in an “izakaya” style (small dishes of between ¥350 – ¥500 each. One thing about the Harajuku location is that all taps are Baird only, unlike the Bashamichi taproom which features rotating guest taps.

While the Yokohama taproom is a bit far afield for me, it’s nice to have that as an option the next time I’m in Yokohama. As for the Harajuku location, I will most definitely be back.

Baird Nakameguro Taproom - Guest Tap Menu

Some of the guest beers available at the Nakameguro location

Update: Just a few days after writing this up, I was close enough to the Nakameguro location to suggest that to a couple of friends as we finished up at a place in Hiroo. They accepted and I was able to complete the Trifecta of Baird Taprooms located in the larger Tokyo area. Unfortunately there was a large party of over 20 people there (it was a Sunday — I gathered they were part of a large guitar circle of students from Waseda), and there was the Rugby World Cup final on TV at the same time, so it was packed and only seats at the counter available. I didn’t take good notes as to what I ordered, but the Bakayaro Ale was definitely the highlight.

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