
So what is it with Mejiro, the rather innocuous cubby hole of a neighbourhood abutting the egregious architectural spew of Ikebukuro and its long fringed, spiky haired, frilly-dress-wearing tribes? Not only is Mejiro a part of Tokyo boasting large gardens and older homes of taste, but it houses two of Tokyo's better wine-bars tucked amidst tasteful izakayas and the ubiquitous incandescent glow of Tokyo. I wrote about Le Mont-St-Michel (www.creperie-mont-st-michel.com) in my last post. In this one I will introduce Vineria (http://www.lavineria.jp/index_en.html).
Vineria is situated left out of Mejiro JR station, past le Mont-St-Michel and on the same side of the street about 100 metres further down at 1F Mejiro Core Bldg, 3-5-12 Mejiro, Toshima-ku 171-0031. Tel. 03-3565-0461. As the name suggests, Vineria specializes in Italian fare and wine and is a sort of casual restaurant/wine bar with a long counter and open kitchen behind, as one enters, which empties into a red brick and stucco dining room that reminded me of a well-kempt roadside place in rural Italy. There are wine fridges overflowing and a selection of bottles around the edifice of the ceiling that made we want to wander about grabbing things such as la Fortuna's Brunello, swathed in a morbid looking blue and grey label evoking Visconti's burning backdrops in The Damned. Aside from the label, la Fortuna's wines are among the fine, traditionally hewn Brunellos and are rarely found in Tokyo. Esoteric perhaps, but most importantly, delicious stuff was everywhere!
Vineria's list is particularly strong in Piedmontese wines and southern 'indigenes' with a slew of Fianos and Grecos that made we want to come back with a large group. This I did the following night but rather than boring you with what I drank, allow me to elucidate the moment when I knew that Vineria was worth its weight in gold in a city boasting lots of politesse but frequently, stifled by style over substance.
I had had a rough night before hauling the body back out to Mejiro yet again. I sat down. Greetings from the staff were cordial rather than yelled at ear-splitting volumes, as is often the way in Japan. I wanted a beer. I thought it ill-appropriate to have beer in a wine bar. I didn't want to look too long at the list. I wanted somebody to acknowledge my splitting head, throbbing limbs and sticky hair. I wanted somebody to take control. Vineria's irreverent yet supremely knowledgeable and passionate sommelier, Nobuhisa Koizumi, did just that. Miraculous! He brought a glass of 2008 Pigato Vigneto Isasco from Punta Crena, a fine Ligurian estate. The crux of this dialogue was that my sagging body reacted to the wine as if it was a remedy to all of my ills. It was the rare type of wine that I wanted to drink in aggressive drafts, the pine scented and white pepper aromas reverberating on a full, slightly viscous palate with tingly minerality for verve and refreshment.
I ordered chicken livers grilled on high quality Japanese charcoal, or bincho, doused in good olive oil and served with arugula-the type of simple rustic fare that I like to eat in wine bars. There is much more to Vineria, both on the wine list and menu. However, I hope this anecdote proves good enough reason; a suitably stimulating tale; to get you out to Mejiro. Vineria is not cheap. It is not part of the hordes offering poor quality wine at low prices. What it does offer however, is fine quality wine by-the-glass or bottle and excellent food at reasonable prices, more than justified by capable staff and an effusive sommelier in Koizumi.
