I went to Fujiya's all-you-can-eat cake event and got a report. I was happy to be able to fill my stomach with cake, but it will end at the end of August 2025, so I'd better hurry.



Fujiya, famous for Peko-chan and Milky, also operates restaurants, some of which offer all-you-can-eat cakes. I heard about a dream-like system where you can eat

as many slices of Fujiya cakes as you want within a 60-minute time limit, so I went to check it out.

Fujiya Restaurant
https://www.fujiya-fs.com/campaign/Fujiya-Cake-All-You-Can-Eat-Great-Cake-Set/

The all-you-can-eat cake event is available at some Fujiya Restaurant locations. This time, I headed to the nearest branch, Ibaraki Shimizu, relying on the information on their official website .



The entrance looks like this.



Peko-chan will greet you when you enter the store.



So, I sat down and ordered the all-you-can-eat cake. The price was 3,278 yen including tax for adults and 1,628 yen including tax for children up to the sixth grade of elementary school.



When I ordered the all-you-can-eat cake option, I was given a Viking card. If I took this card to the cake counter in the store, they would serve me two cakes at a time on my plate.



After finishing eating, the plates were piled up on the table, and we were given baskets to put cake wrappings and other things in.



The cake display case looks like this. You can eat as many slices of cake as you want for 60 minutes.



There is a wide variety of cakes on display, including shortcake, chocolate cake, cheesecake, and Mont Blanc.



For the first round, we had the 'Premium Shortcake (single item price: 667 yen including tax)' and the 'Premium Rich Matcha Cake (single item price: 667 yen including tax)' served.



Many of Fujiya's cakes are packed with sponge cake, and the cream is generally firm and rich. Because of this, each cake is 'plenty enough to be a snack in itself,' and while eating, you simultaneously feel 'I'm so happy to be able to eat so much cake,' and 'They're all so filling, I'm sure I'll be full in no time.'



For the second round, I chose the Hokkaido Smooth Cheese Pie (single item price: 594 yen including tax) and the Premium Rich Baked Cheesecake (single item price: 667 yen including tax). Normally, I would have trouble deciding which cheesecake to choose, but since it's an all-you-can-eat option, I was able to eat without worrying.



The 'Hokkaido Smooth Cheese Pie' is a perfect combination of moist pie crust and smooth cheese crust. The 'Premium Rich Baked Cheesecake' is baked to perfection, giving it a texture that crumbles easily in your mouth. Of course, both are very filling.



For the third round, I chose the Oven-baked Double Cream Puff (single item price: 437 yen including tax) and the Wakayama Prefecture Plum Milky Mont Blanc (single item price: 518 yen including tax). When you hear the term 'cut cake,' you tend to think of a cake cut from a whole cake, but in the case of Fujiya, cream puffs and Mont Blancs are also included in the cut cake category.



The Oven-Baked Double Cream Puffs are a creamy treat made with Chantilly cream and a light custard cream. I had been eating smoothly up until this point, but midway through my sixth Oven-Baked Double Cream Puff, I suddenly started to feel like, 'Maybe I've had enough of sweet things!' My stomach still had plenty of room to spare, and I could easily eat something salty like ramen, but it felt like I suddenly couldn't tolerate sweet things. It wasn't like I was gradually approaching my limit, but rather that the limit suddenly arrived.



Not wanting to be greedy and leave any leftovers, I decided to have just one 'Premium Chocolate Fresh Cake (single item price: 667 yen including tax)' on my fourth round. The all-you-can-eat cake also comes with a drink bar, so I enjoyed the bitterness of the coffee and the sweetness of the chocolate, and finished off the 'Premium Chocolate Fresh Cake.' Since I felt like I couldn't enjoy the taste any more, I gave up after eating a total of seven cakes with about five minutes left.



The plates are piled up. The price of the all-you-can-eat cake is 3,278 yen including tax, and the total price of the seven cakes we ate this time is 4,217 yen including tax, so we saved 934 yen. The editorial staff member who accompanied us ate all 10 cakes in one go and said, 'I could still eat about four more,' so some people may enjoy cakes at a better price.



There was a notice posted at the cash register announcing the cancellation of the all-you-can-eat cake offer and an announcement that the price of cake sets had increased.



The stores offering the all-you-can-eat cake are listed below. Just to be sure, I called Fujiya and was told that

the all-you-can-eat cake offer will end on August 31, 2025, not just at the Ibaraki Shimizu store I visited, but at all stores , so if you're interested, you'd better hurry.



in Tasting, Posted by log1o_hf