アビタ内の美味しい食料品、ぜひ体験して!
カネ美食品の特徴
食料品の提供でアビタ内の商品がとても美味しかったです。
レジが少なく混雑することが多いので増設を希望します。
アビタ内の商品選びを楽しむことができる魅力的なスーパーマーケットです。
レジがすくないので大変混雑しているのでもう少し増やして欲しい!
食料品の提供でアビタ内の商品でしたね、とても美味しかったです。
| 名前 |
カネ美食品 |
|---|---|
| ジャンル |
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| 電話番号 |
0557-38-5707 |
| 営業時間 |
[木金土日月火水] 9:00~21:00 |
| HP | |
| 評価 |
3.0 |
| 住所 |
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ストリートビューの情報は現状と異なる場合があります。
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周辺のオススメ
カネ美食品 (Kanemi Shokuhin) in APiTA Itō is clean, conveniently located, and offers the standard quality of Japanese service—but tourists, beware: the taxes and fees here are unusually high. Out of a ¥6,000 bill, roughly ¥2,000 went to fees, something I’ve never experienced elsewhere in Japan. 2/5 – A frustrating surprise beneath an otherwise pleasant shopping trip.Full Review:As someone who genuinely enjoys grocery store visits in Japan—scouting for bentos, grabbing regional snacks, and marveling at just how well-run everything typically is—I must admit, my experience at カネ美食品 (Kanemi Shokuhin) inside APiTA Itō left me rather disillusioned.Let’s begin with the positives, because they’re worth noting. The store itself is clean and inviting, with a well-considered layout that makes browsing easy. It’s located in a convenient shopping mall, right alongside familiar comforts like Mister Donut and KFC. The customer service lives up to the gold standard of Japanese hospitality—polite, prompt, and professional. So far, so good.But then we come to the issue. And unfortunately, it’s a big one.After a fairly standard grocery run—nothing extravagant, nothing too niche—I found myself paying just over ¥6,000. That’s fine... until I noticed that nearly ¥2,000 of that total was taxes and/or fees. I was stunned. In all my time traveling across Japan—whether wandering through the convenience stores of Tokyo, shopping local in Aomori, or picking up bento in rural towns—I have never been hit with that kind of surcharge.It’s possible this was a unique situation. Perhaps a perfect storm of item types, mall-specific pricing structures, or a tax scheme I simply wasn't aware of. But as a foreign traveler, I’m used to Japan being transparent and fair about what I’m paying. And this particular visit felt more like a gotcha moment than a seamless shopping experience.Now, let me be clear: I don’t think this is a “bad” grocery store for the locals. In fact, it might be a perfectly fine, even beloved spot for regulars in the area. They likely know what to expect. But for travelers—especially ones trying to stock up on a few items without breaking the bank—this place may deliver more sticker shock than satisfaction.I can’t help but feel this store, or perhaps the mall it’s housed in, isn’t designed with tourists in mind—and that’s perfectly okay. I’m not their target customer. I don’t expect special treatment. But I do expect clarity and consistency, and this experience was a glaring exception to the usual rule of Japanese retail precision.Rating: 2/5.A functional, well-kept store that loses major points for a pricing model that left a sour taste. A disappointment, albeit one wrapped in politeness and shiny floors. Proceed with caution—and keep an eye on that receipt.