The gorgeous greenery is your reward for making it to the final switch at Shin-Imamiya, touristy Kyoto and industrial Osaka long forgotten. The only skyscrapers are cloud-climbing trees, and the stops are so secluded that even the pocket wifi doesn't reach.
It takes nearly an hour of chugging around the mountains, but we make it to the cable car. Afraid of heights? The cable car is NOT for you. Shaped like a staircase for the vertical climb ahead, it will make you feel like you are literally falling off the face of the earth.
Still, the cable car is not the end. It is only after ten bus stops that we find ourselves at Kumagaiji, one of the 52 shukudo where we will spend the night.
The temples are in traditional Japanese style, with paper doors sliding open to reveal a series of no-shoes-no-problem tatami mats lining each room. Ryokan, it is not, but the service comes quite close. The common bath is like an onsen, cozy yukata are worn everywhere but the temple, and the monks serve meals right in your room. They collect your finished dishes and drag out a mattress right when the food coma starts to set in.
Shojin Ryori is the food of choice, and the monks eat like kings. Dinner starts off light, a clear Soup with slices of tofu skin. Their pride-and-joy Sesame Tofu is a dense, pasty, savory square; pure and rich. The Tempura is textbook, and the green tea salt trumps the finest dipping broth. The usual suspects are always welcome: eggplant, shishito, sweet potato, kabocha, but the lotus root is an added bonus. Small slices of Fried Gluten are tougher, purposely chewy and made to be mock meat. The slices are like a drier smoked tofu, a concentrated flavor best interspersed with bites of rice.
Cheese crusts half an Avocado on the second tray, rich enough to be a meal by itself. The sugared and suspiciously alcoholic plum Tomato is a palate-cleansing contrast, making room for the more rice to go with the fuzzy fronds of Pickled Fern. Freeze Dried Tofu is another Koyasan special, spongy cells soaked in sweetness; as much a dessert as the fresh chunks of Watermelon.
We crawl into bed by 9, exhausted from the trip, with morning services scheduled promptly at 630 AM.
Morning services are simple, yet no less spiritual, with a single chanting monk. The fire ceremony that follows is far more exciting, and I throw my wish, happiness, into the fire. As I watch the flames dance around my stick and feel the beat of the drums in my chest, I think that maybe my wish is already granted.
I'm still full from dinner when we sit down to breakfast, but the seductively simple spread looks too good to refuse. A few sips of green tea is an eye-opener, and a bowl of rice glides down with a sweet gluten and vegetable cake, pickled Bamboo Shoots, and swigs of Miso Soup.
We bid a brief goodbye to Kumagaiji, checking out and dragging our bags, just to check in elsewhere.
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