A customer gave me some iron-plate senbei crackers from Ogura-ya Confectionery (→here).

It's the famous tokuyou amakaraversion, and
of the 16 different flavors available (all 200 yen per bag),
this is different from the standard "amakaraf" flavor—
the tokuyou amakaraversion comes in a larger quantity at 300 yen per bag and has an even sweeter-and-saltier taste profile.
If you're buying, I'd recommend this one.
The customer is from Osaka, but picked this up for me while on a business trip to Tokyo.
Tokyo's a big place though, and the client location and Ogura-ya Confectionery in Zoshigaya aren't anywhere near each other,
yet they went out of their way, transferring trains multiple times to stop by.
I've given this customer tokuyou amakarabefore,
and they're already aware of what I call its highly addictive properties,
but this time they're the ones giving it to me.
And just when I was getting over my withdrawal symptoms too.
I recommend shaking the bag gently—just enough so the senbei don't break—to get that highly addictive amakarapowder distributed evenly throughout.
I call this action "shake-shake narcotics."

There's a notch cut vertically down the bag,
but if you follow it

the bag opening won't close anymore,
so cutting horizontally with scissors is actually the right way.
But honestly, once it's open either way,
my hand never stops eating, so it doesn't really matter anyway.
Ugh, no good—my brain still remembers the taste after all.
Looks like I need to order another 30 bags or so, for personal use and to evangelize to others. Heheheh.

It's the famous tokuyou amakaraversion, and
of the 16 different flavors available (all 200 yen per bag),
this is different from the standard "amakaraf" flavor—
the tokuyou amakaraversion comes in a larger quantity at 300 yen per bag and has an even sweeter-and-saltier taste profile.
If you're buying, I'd recommend this one.
The customer is from Osaka, but picked this up for me while on a business trip to Tokyo.
Tokyo's a big place though, and the client location and Ogura-ya Confectionery in Zoshigaya aren't anywhere near each other,
yet they went out of their way, transferring trains multiple times to stop by.
I've given this customer tokuyou amakarabefore,
and they're already aware of what I call its highly addictive properties,
but this time they're the ones giving it to me.
I recommend shaking the bag gently—just enough so the senbei don't break—to get that highly addictive amakarapowder distributed evenly throughout.

There's a notch cut vertically down the bag,
but if you follow it

the bag opening won't close anymore,
so cutting horizontally with scissors is actually the right way.
But honestly, once it's open either way,
my hand never stops eating, so it doesn't really matter anyway.
Ugh, no good—my brain still remembers the taste after all.
Looks like I need to order another 30 bags or so, for personal use and to evangelize to others. Heheheh.