View Full Version : The Great Omiyage Thread
nice gaijin
Jun 30, 2006, 04:53
Reading some of the recent and not-so-recent posts, I've noticed a smattering of omiyage (souvenir gift) related questions, and since it is such an important part of Japanese culture, especially in making first impressions, I figured it deserved a definitive thread for all questions and ideas for great gifts.
One of my own motive for creating this thread is that I'll be studying at Waseda in Tokyo for a year starting this fall, and would like some ideas for gifts to give to my future host family, as well as the families of friends with whom I stayed during my trip last year. I don't wish to give the same gifts, so I have to mix things up a bit.
I found that items unique to my area or specialty items went over especially well. My gifts last year included:
a bottle of Wine from my home state
a large bag of Pistachios
a music magazine
and lots of different kinds of chocolates from a local confectionary, which served as both packaged omiyage for the people I felt especially indebted to, and a single-serving gift to casual acquaintences and the friends of friends.
What do like to give or receive as omiyage?
Dutch Baka
Jul 4, 2006, 10:53
I brought a lot of Cheese with me, Stroopwafels, and some delfs blue for the family.
I also bought some Dutch post cards, that I want to give to people in here.
For my father in law, I bought a bottle of wine in a special Rembrandt 400 years box, for my sister in law a nice photo holder with some dutch things on the side, and of course some Miffy because she is Dutch for my brothers upcoming child
nice gaijin
Jul 12, 2006, 01:36
I was worried about bringing food items with me, such as cheese, but the pistachios didn't cause any problems and went over well. Perhaps some good preserves would be a nice option. I forgot to mention one gift I brought for my friend's obaasan; some excellent local honey. They really enjoyed that.
PsychoticNess
Jul 12, 2006, 19:58
This is an interesting post. I'm wondering what would be good gifts also, for I may need some ideas when I study abroad next fall. I hear bring lots of pictures for your host family to look at(not to keep, just to look at). Is that true?
What about little cutsey stuff? books? ...I think i'm thinking too big now.
MySweetYossie
Aug 3, 2006, 22:59
Top Knot.
Wind Chimes.
Local Honey (As Mentioned)
Traditional Doll. (Expensive)
Iron Chef
Aug 4, 2006, 03:20
A couple of ideas:
Kids seem to love DC/Marvel comic books. Their relatively cheap, lightweight, and are a nice departure from the traditional monocolor or B&W manga. Popular icons like Spiderman, Batman, etc. would probably go over well.
As lame as it might sound, good 'ol American beef jerky (preferrably a local brand). It's always been well-received from my experience, especially with the older folks.
Novelty gifts that perpetuate the "American image" like Harley Davidson gear, presidential bobbleheads, panoramic (or scantily-clad) photo calendars, etc.
nice gaijin
Aug 4, 2006, 04:41
Have they lifted the beef ban? I'd hate to have my omiyage confiscated!
epigene
Aug 4, 2006, 08:36
Have they lifted the beef ban? I'd hate to have my omiyage confiscated!
Not yet. But it may be, depending on your arrival date! :bluush:
As for Omiyage I really would consider avoiding any alcohol for a host family for various minor reasons. I considered getting alcohol from Napa for my host family, but decided against it, and a few people I talked to who went last year agreed that there are safer things to choose. You really have no idea what type of host family you will get placed with, so play it safe. However, as for people you know, and other friends and family you have met then go for it. It is usually a very good thing of omiyage otherwise. Just don't break it on the trip there!
Food from different regions is a BIG thing in Japan. As long as it is clearly sealed, then you should be safe at customs. Watch out for chocolate and keep it in a cool place! When you get to Japan it is going to be HOT and probably will melt very easily due to the fact that not every room and place has air conditioning. Depends on the chocolate and where you put it. As for other foods, this always is good omiyage if you can bring special foods from America that won't get yanked at customs. Don't bring beef... you're asking for trouble you don't need. Above all, avoid ANYTHING that might cause the slightest trouble in Japan. You can only predict so many things, and if you foresee a possible problem, then be glad you can maybe avoid that and take the moment to do that when you can.
As for reading material for host families... it is iffy. Be conservative unless you know the people. My host family was catholic and fairly conservative, so getting a music magazine could have been not a very good choice for them.
One thing of Omiyage that is good as a little trinket is $2 bills. I know it sounds weird, but a lot of Japanese people, even those who studied abroad in America, have never seen these. A certain girlfriend of a Panda we both know thought they were quite neat, as well as a few other people I mentioned to them in Japan. They are cheap small omiyage that you can get at the post office usually and have quite a "Oooo cool!" value to them. I'm not kidding either.
The rule I have gone by is this... if you know the person, you're probably gonna know exactly what to get them. If you DON'T know the person... play it safe as first impressions can say a lot. Especially with a host family you will be with for a year! Sealed food is the safest bet, and that is what I recommend if you can't think of anything otherwise. Avoid anything that might even SLIGHTLY be a risk for a gift. You probably will be ok, but if you aren't you will regret it for the rest of the year you are here.
nice gaijin
Aug 6, 2006, 14:15
Good advice, emoni. I also would say as a general rule I wouldn't want to give something I couldn't enjoy with the receiving party, so if I didn't drink alcohol I shouldn't give it as a gift.
I think what I'll do is have some omiyage specifically for people I know, and some generally "safe" gifts for everyone else. Any particular foods or products you'd recommend? I'm going to start compiling a list pretty soon.
some traditional items
- scarves, traditional printed
- handicraft
- local hand puppets, handcrafted to the smallest details.
- some local dried foods.
nice gaijin
Aug 6, 2006, 17:15
You have given those as omiyage, Timey? They were traditional items from which culture? Can't say there's a wealth of scarves or hand puppets around here, but that sounds very interesting.
gaijinalways
Aug 8, 2006, 00:15
Hand made curios are nice, but sadly many Japanese like the more touristy crap with the name of the area on it (spoons, thimbles, magnets, etc), especially if it is a more famous area (not necessarily your hometown, as long as it is somewhat nearby).
Food choices can be fun, we still buy things like that now with my wife picking up British chocolate at the supermarket as it's expensive and difficult to get in Japan. Spoilage is a problem, as well as fragile items that may get broken or damaged enroute.
Some people are also crazy about clothing, again with the name of the place emblazoned across it. We still pick up hats for my father-in-law with various place names.
Brand names are still big in Japan, but of course you're talking about spending more bucks in that case. Even sweaters or sweatshirts with a well known luxary brand are gagaed over in some cases.
nurizeko
Aug 8, 2006, 00:36
I live in Scotland, my country was made for Omiyagi considorations, bwahahahahahaha!. :wave:
A bit o' whiskey for the pa, some stylish Scottish style jewelry for the girlfriend, A very posh nice item for the mum, some tartan wear for the future-sister-in-law, and foodstuff's for everyone in general.
Dont tell my lady, but there is this "Scottish shop" in the city centre of my home city, and more often then not thats where the majority of her and her families gifts/omiyagi come from.
And I love Japanese omiyagi so its the perfect relationship.
:cool:
You have given those as omiyage, Timey? They were traditional items from which culture? Can't say there's a wealth of scarves or hand puppets around here, but that sounds very interesting.
yes.
those are from indonesia.
i usually brought the scarves with batik pattern made of silk.
Batik is the traditional pattern for fabrics in my country, lots of different pattern styles depends from which part of the country, several different techniques of printing (hand printed, machine printed or mix and different ingredients for the paints -organic and non organic----which creates a wide range for the cost).
as for the hand puppets -called wayang- is usually used for traditional stage performance, traditional background music and singers, the puppet masters will personify the character's voice and sing. got some different materials for the puppet also, the most popular ones are made of wood (3D) and leather(2D, shadow puppet), different colours for different characters, the accessories and also the apparel, lots of different sizes.
as for omiyage, for easy handling, i'll go for the leather one.
i've found out lots of foreigners -not only japanese- love these kind of things, also some other traditional stuff. So, actually it's not quite hard to find omiyage for foreigners. some of them even love to explore the village and bought it before it was distributed to the shops--straight from the workers/artists.
this is the wooden one with the puppet master and and the batik as in hand printed
http://www.marlamallett.com/Puppet_Master-Java.jpg http://www.expat.or.id/images/olderladyapplywax.jpg
interested ? :-)
See's Chocolates worked pretty good for food, Jelly Belly beans worked good too. However, these are a bit sweet... Goods that have American logos on them, even if they are common things can be good for little omiyage as well, food included.
sadie_sue
Aug 10, 2006, 13:56
I know in the states the are certain things that are made and sold only in a one state, so those things usually make good gifts. I know that my cousin gave my mom this special brand of baked beans once, which was pretty weird but mom loved them and couldn't afford to have beans specially delivered across the country.
I talked to "a certain guy who I rode with down to the Berkley area" and he mentioned that coffee might be a good omiyage idea. He also had some other ideas as well that you might ask about. I never had to think too much about it because I got things specific to each person and just stuck to something basic for my host family. I think your host family is all you will need to think about actually.
nice gaijin
Aug 13, 2006, 19:19
coffee might be a good idea, but as with the others, depends on people's tastes. I'm still thinking about gifts (even small ones) for the families I spent time with last year, especially if I find myself in need of their hospitality once again, for whatever reason :)
yamada
Aug 22, 2006, 22:45
Something of the like pepper, tabasco source...
nurizeko
Aug 22, 2006, 23:37
I found a big Rosemary bush growing behind the fence at the back of my yard so I took some clippings, yay Rosemary dishes omiyagi for a few years, bwahahaha!. :p
Yes I enjoy growing plants :O.
Meh, if it wasnt such a bio-hazard booboo I'de give plants from my own nursery to folk, but chances are they'd kill em.
ArmandV
Aug 24, 2006, 23:47
On my first trip to Japan, I brought with me bottles of California wine as gifts for some movie studio executives (which ended up breaking before I could give them, so I ended up giving some local Japanese wines) and a Los Angeles Dodgers t-shirt.
nice gaijin
Aug 29, 2006, 14:14
I get two suitcases up to 70lbs, right? Looks like one of them is going to be quite full of gifts. I might have overdone it a bit. I can leave stuff behind if necessary, but I have at least three families aside from my host family to whom I wish to give gifts. Thus far:
California themed kitchen towel
Alcatraz warden badge in case the host-family has a kid)
Mojo Music Magazine with a Sample disc of 15 different artists
a 4-disc DVD set called "over California" which can also be broken up among recipients (yes I know about the region codes, I intend to create region-free copies to include with the set). The idea is to share some images of my home state. It might even be better to just take the region free discs and show them to people instead of giving them away as gifts.
a 4lb bag of pistachios
1lb can of macadamia nuts
2.5lbs of mixed nuts
two .5lb bags of beef jerky (sealed)
two large tins of chocolate biscuits (about 2.5lbs apiece)
two bottles of Napa wine
small 1-2lb bottle of local honey
mini-carton of Nat Sherman cigarettes (for smokers)
a couple small bags of assorted chocolatey candies that can be given away to friends and such.
nurizeko
Aug 29, 2006, 20:32
Great list, Nice Gaijin.
epigene
Aug 29, 2006, 21:32
small 1-2lb bottle of local honey
The list looks great! :cool:
Honey on your list reminded me of the lemon- and orange-scented honey I used to like in California. Honey in Japan is commonly from acacia or mikan orange at best. If it's not too late, the lemon and orange scented ones would be nice! :cool:
nice gaijin
Aug 30, 2006, 04:20
Actually, the honey is the only thing on the list I haven't gotten yet. There's a local honey/beekeeper store nearby that has excellent stuff from a wide variety of plants. It's quite amazing how much range there is in color, flavor and consistency.
Ranpyon
Apr 8, 2007, 23:14
I presented to my host family (which ended to be only a lady lol) some Italian stuff, because she liked Italy (she even knew Italian).
Well, that's what I took:
* a stylish Italian Bialetti Moka + 250g of finest Italian cofee
* tablecloth, napkins, pot holder with a pattern typical of my area
* Italian cheese (Grana) + random Italian food lol
* picture books about my area
I'm pretty sure I presented her more stuff, but I dont remember what @_@ eww
For my friend I took an italian polo and some liquor for his parents, and for another friend I took some cute stationery because she loves kawaii things :blush:I also took other "jolly" gifts for my other friends, about soccer and so on ^^
NekoMama7
Apr 12, 2007, 03:35
Just found this thread...
I can only suggest stuff to bring from the US, but you'll get the idea.
I found that eco bags are really useful in Japan and they can be great low-cost souveniers. I hear many expats stock up a bunch of bags from Trader Joe's or Whole Foods to bring back to Japan. Basic canvas bags at TJ's are about $2.99 and they're not sold in Japan (that's the key). Many bookstores have their own totes, as well as department stores and museum shops.
As far as I know, brands like Old Navy and Ann Taylor don't have stores in Japan. Bath & Body Works is a great place to stock up on lotions and soaps when they're on sale. They are not sold in Japan. It seems like that Japanese prefer fruity scents (esp Orange-y ones). Preserves from Sarabeth's Kitchen are great, but you need to pack carefully. My sisters said they'd never seen microwave popcorns when I brought one. Just make sure that you give accurate instructions as Japanese microwave ovens don't have the preset "popcorn" buttons!
My mother liked ragluhs (the spelling may vary) that I got from Ralphs. Many Kosher bakeries have pastries and cookies that aren't sold in Japan and they're not too sweet. If you can get a hold of premium chocolates (like Joseph Schmidt), they can be nice, too. Miniature-size candy bars that are sold in bulk at Target, etc., are fun too. They might be on the sweet side, but because they're small, your Japanese hosts may be able to enjoy them. Holiday versions of M&M's are fun too.
Coffee table books on your home turf may be nice to give, but they can be a bit heavy.
Spices and condiments that you know how to use. Even a box of Lipton onion soup mix can be good. Mix with sour cream and you get a dip! Taste of America! Chilli mix (like Wick Fowler's 2-Alarm Chili Mix) or BBQ sauces might be nice too. Chili goes really well with white rice. You should be able to find other ingredients (tomato sauce, meat, etc) in the local markets in Japan.
If you're in the States, shirts and caps of baseball teams with Japanese players would be nice, especially if you have one of those teams in your town. I saw some photos of Kobe Bryant while in Japan. Lakers still sucks since Shaq left, though. If you know the person you're bringing souveniers to is a big sports fan, you may want to ask beforehand so that you can bring in something that's one of a kind.
But as always, local craft items, like dolls and the like, are nice. Don't bring anything huge, though. Remember that Japanese homes are usually tiny!
Maybe I'll come up with more later.... :-)
epigene
Apr 12, 2007, 10:30
I just remembered that we had a good laugh giving out these to kids!
http://us.st11.yimg.com/us.st.yimg.com/I/candywarehouse_1941_23232021
Gummy worms!! :giggle:
NekoMama7
Apr 19, 2007, 07:18
If you're a teacher and have some extra space in your suitcase, consider brining a whole batch of Sunday paper. Coupons and all. Bigger the better. Show it to your students and talk about it in the class.
Goldiegirl
May 9, 2007, 13:06
It's already starting...the pressure of what to bring everybody. What are we going to buy for him, for her, for your brother, and his cat and the neighbor and the list goes on. We are heading back to Japan in about 6 weeks and the question of what to bring everyone is hanging over my head like a giant hangmans noose. Everytime we go back to Japan are we expected to bring omiyage? We are going to be there on a routine basis. It's getting hard to bring new and exciting gifts. We've done cheese, candy, honey, jams and jellies, sports stuff etc. I am out of ideas. And do I have to bring as much stuff as I usually bring...now that we are going to be there frequently? I like giving gifts, but for how long? Can it be small things now? Does it ever end? It's like a gift giving circle...we give so they give, so we give again and it just repeats.....
NekoMama7
May 10, 2007, 07:09
Oh, you are in the omiyage hell! LOL
I'd say stick with folks really close to you. And ask if there's anything particular they'd like from the States. And there's always those boxed chocolates at the airport. "Oh, I've been so f-ing busy, I didn't have any time getting omiyage this time, but I wanted to get you something..." And don't announce to the world that you'll be there. Keep a low profile. Hide! LOL
I bring my mother a big container of Metamucil. That thing works miracle on her but not sold in her neighborhood. My middle sister doesn't appreciate anything, so I usually don't bring her anything.
Goldiegirl
May 10, 2007, 09:57
Thanks NekoMama7! Thank-you for understanding. I wish everyone I knew needed metamucil, that would make gift giving so much easier! :) About keeping a low profile, I'd love to do that...if only we could. I do like giving everybody stuff because I think they do appreciate it. The hard part is the weight restrictions when flying and just managing the who gets what gift and the oh my gosh we forgot to get your mom something issues. I was thinking today that all the people I know there chew a lot of gum, would bringing an assortment of chewing gums be ok?
Dutch Baka
May 10, 2007, 11:49
if you know what they like you can bring the same thing again.
My family in law loves Dutch cheese, so everytime that I will be going to the Netherlands I will bring Dutch cheese with them, and some local wine/whiskey.
I think the first time you should bring most omiyage's, they next times only some small things.
NekoMama7
May 11, 2007, 03:29
Mmmm...cheese....
Anyway, Goldiegirl, do you have a Costco membership? Or any of your friends have one? Go get some huge Costco-size packages of gum. "OMG! Even gum is huge in America!!" And when it's around major holidays, Peeps in various forms can be a fun conversation piece. "It's super sweet and disgusting, but I can't stop eating them." That's what my youngest sister kept saying while eating chick Peeps. Cheap and light too.
In Japan, there is a huge omiyage market and wherever you go, there are merchandise sold for that particular purpose. Train stations, airport, department stores, etc. In addition to being customary to bring omiyage, stores are selling omiyage products (whatever may be) right in your face wherever you go. It's tough to deal with a society like that. And lots of Japanese tourists spend lots of time shopping for omiyage (more than sightseeing) when they travel, you know.
Thank goodness for Metamucil.
maushan3
May 11, 2007, 14:12
I want to give something very Mexican, along with some American things, mostly food. I thought テキラ (I'm getting better at Japanese!) or Tequila would be a a great thing to give but after giving it some thought, yes, I might have some trouble with the association and/or family since drinking age in Japan is 20 and I am 17.
So, I will bring some regional candy, American beef jerky, mmm, probably some souvenir from my home, a music CD from the U.S. depending if I have a host sister/brother and probably a shirt for my host dad and mom.
Mauricio
Goldiegirl
May 11, 2007, 23:08
Yes, bring beef jerky. That was a big hit with everone. :)
NekoMama7
May 12, 2007, 06:08
Beef jerkeys made and sold in the USA are still banned in Japan. If you're caught at the customs, you'll be forced to give them up.
nice gaijin
May 12, 2007, 06:33
I brought jerky with me last fall and there was no problem, but that might just be because they didn't check my luggage... According to this link (http://www.maff-aqs.go.jp/english/ryoko/aq2/aq2.htm), Beef products were barred from import as of January last year. So it's a great gift, but perhaps you do run the risk of it being confiscated.
Goldiegirl
May 12, 2007, 07:45
Not only have I brought numerous bags into Japan, I mailed Christmas presents there as well and they were all beef sausages and such and I had no trouble. One of the boxes was even opened up upon entry and customs let it through, it just held up delivery for a day. I am not saying it's legal, but I've haven't had a problem.
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