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Wikipedia

Japanese cuisine

Japanese cuisine encompasses the regional and traditional foods of Japan, which have developed through centuries of political, economic, and social changes. The traditional cuisine of Japan (Japanese: washoku) is based on rice with miso soup and other dishes; there is an emphasis on seasonal ingredients. Side dishes often consist of fish, pickled vegetables, and vegetables cooked in broth. Seafood is common, often grilled, but also served raw as sashimi or in sushi. Seafood and vegetables are also deep-fried in a light batter, as tempura. Apart from rice, a staple includes noodles, such as soba and udon. Japan also has many simmered dishes, such as fish products in broth called oden, or beef in sukiyaki and nikujaga.

Osechi, new year special dishes

Historically influenced by Chinese cuisine, Japanese cuisine has also opened up to influence from Western cuisines in the modern era. Dishes inspired by foreign food—in particular Chinese food—like ramen and gyōza, as well as foods like spaghetti, curry and hamburgers, have been adapted to Japanese tastes and ingredients. Some regional dishes have also become familiar throughout Japan, including the taco rice staple of Okinawan cuisine that has itself been influenced by American and Mexican culinary traditions.[1] Traditionally, the Japanese shunned meat as a result of adherence to Buddhism, but with the modernization of Japan in the 1880s, meat-based dishes such as tonkatsu and yakiniku have become common. Since this time, Japanese cuisine, particularly sushi and ramen, has become popular globally.

In 2011, Japan overtook France to become the country with the most 3-starred Michelin restaurants; as of 2018, the capital of Tokyo has maintained the title of the city with the most 3-starred restaurants in the world.[2] In 2013, Japanese cuisine was added to the UNESCO Intangible Heritage List.[3]

Terminology

 
A Japanese meal including tempura, sashimi, and miso soup

The word washoku (和食) is now the common word for traditional Japanese cooking. The term kappō [ja] (割烹, lit. "cutting and boiling (meats)") is synonymous with "cooking", but became a reference to mostly Japanese cooking, or restaurants, and was much used in the Meiji and Taishō eras.[4][5] It has come to connote a certain standard, perhaps even of the highest caliber, a restaurant with the most highly trained chefs.[6] However, kappō is generally seen as an eating establishment which is slightly more casual or informal compared to the kaiseki.[7]

The kaiseki (懐石, lit. "warming stone") is tied with the Japanese tea ceremony.[8] The kaiseki is considered a (simplified) form of honzen-ryōri (本膳料理, lit. "main tray cooking"),[9] which was formal banquet dining where several trays of food was served.[10] The homophone term kaiseki ryōri (会席料理, lit. "gathering + seating") originally referred to a gathering of composers of haiku or renga, and the simplified version of the honzen dishes served at the poem parties became kaiseki ryōri.[11] However, the meaning of kaiseki ryōri degenerated to become just another term for a sumptuous carousing banquet, or shuen (酒宴).[12]

Traditional cuisine

Japanese cuisine is based on combining the staple food, which is steamed white rice or gohan (御飯), with one or more okazu, "main" or "side" dishes. This may be accompanied by a clear or miso soup and tsukemono (pickles). The phrase ichijū-sansai (一汁三菜, "one soup, three sides") refers to the makeup of a typical meal served but has roots in classic kaiseki, honzen, and yūshoku cuisine. The term is also used to describe the first course served in standard kaiseki cuisine nowadays.[12]

The origin of Japanese "one soup, three sides" cuisine is a dietary style called Ichiju-Issai (一汁一菜, "one soup, one dish"),[13] tracing back to the Five Great Zen Temples of the 12-century Kamakura period (Kamakura Gozan), developed as a form of meal that emphasized frugality and simplicity.

Rice is served in its own small bowl (chawan), and each main course item is placed on its own small plate (sara) or bowl (hachi) for each individual portion. This is done even in Japanese homes. This contrasts with Western-style home dinners in which each individual takes helpings from large serving dishes of food placed in the middle of the dining table. Japanese style traditionally abhors different flavored dishes touching each other on a single plate, so different dishes are given their own individual plates as mentioned or are partitioned using, for example, leaves. Placing main dishes on top of rice, thereby "soiling" it, is also frowned upon by traditional etiquette.[14]

 
Breakfast at a ryokan (Japanese inn), featuring grilled mackerel, Kansai-style dashimaki egg, tofu in kaminabe (paper pot)

Although this tradition of not placing other foods on rice originated from classical Chinese dining formalities, especially after the adoption of Buddhist tea ceremonies; it became most popular and common during and after the Kamakura period, such as in the kaiseki. Although present-day Chinese cuisine has abandoned this practice, Japanese cuisine retains it. One exception is the popular donburi, in which toppings are directly served on rice.

The small rice bowl (茶碗, chawan), literally "tea bowl", doubles as a word for the large tea bowls in tea ceremonies. Thus in common speech, the drinking cup is referred to as yunomi-jawan or yunomi for the purpose of distinction. Among the nobility, each course of a full-course Japanese meal would be brought on serving napkins called zen (), which were originally platformed trays or small dining tables. In the modern age, faldstool trays or stackup-type legged trays may still be seen used in zashiki, i.e. tatami-mat rooms, for large banquets or at a ryokan type inn. Some restaurants might use the suffix -zen () as a more sophisticated though dated synonym to the more familiar teishoku (定食), since the latter basically is a term for a combo meal served at a taishū-shokudō, akin to a diner.[15] Teishoku means a meal of fixed menu (for example, grilled fish with rice and soup), a dinner à prix fixe[16] served at shokudō (食堂, "dining hall") or ryōriten (料理店, "restaurant"), which is somewhat vague (shokudō can mean a diner-type restaurant or a corporate lunch hall); writer on Japanese popular culture Ishikawa Hiroyoshi[17] defines it as fare served at teishoku dining halls (定食食堂, teishoku-shokudō), and comparable diner-like establishments.

History

 
Osechi, new year dishes

Rice is a staple in Japanese cuisine. Wheat and soybeans were introduced shortly after rice. All three act as staple foods in Japanese cuisine today. At the end of the Kofun Period and beginning of the Asuka Period, Buddhism became the official religion of the country. Therefore, eating meat and fish was prohibited. In 675 AD, Emperor Tenmu prohibited the eating of horses, dogs, monkeys, and chickens.[18] In the 8th and 9th centuries, many emperors continued to prohibit killing many types of animals. The number of regulated meats increased significantly, leading to the banning of all mammals except whale, which were categorized as fish.[19] During the Asuka period, chopsticks were introduced to Japan. Initially, they were only used by the nobility.[20] The general population used their hands, as utensils were quite expensive.

Due to the lack of meat products Japanese people minimized spice utilization. Spices were rare to find at the time. Spices like pepper and garlic were only used in a minimalist amount. In the absence of meat, fish was served as the main protein, as Japan is an island nation. Fish has influenced many iconic Japanese dishes today. In the 9th century, grilled fish and sliced raw fish were widely popular.[21] Japanese people who could afford it would eat fish at every meal; others would have to make do without animal protein for many of their meals. In traditional Japanese cuisine, oil and fat are usually avoided within the cooking process, because Japanese people were trying to keep a healthy lifestyle.[21]

Preserving fish became a sensation; sushi was originated as a means of preserving fish by fermenting it in boiled rice. Fish that are salted and then placed in rice are preserved by lactic acid fermentation, which helps prevent the proliferation of the bacteria that bring about putrefaction.[22] During the 15th century, advancement and development helped shorten the fermentation of sushi to about one to two weeks. Sushi thus became a popular snack food and main entrée, combining fish with rice. During the late Edo period (early-19th century), sushi without fermentation was introduced. Sushi was still being consumed with and without fermentation till the 19th century when the hand-rolled and nigri-type sushi was invented.[23]

In 1854, Japan started to gain new trade deals with Western countries when a new Japanese ruling order took over (known as the Meiji Restoration). Emperor Meiji, the new ruler, staged a New Years' feast designed to embrace the Western world and countries in 1872. The feast contained food that had a lot of European emphases.[citation needed] For the first time in a thousand years, people were allowed to consume meat in public. After this New Years feast, the general population from Japan started to consume meat again.[24]

Seasonality

 
Kaiseki appetizers on a wooden plate

Emphasis is placed on seasonality of food or shun (),[25][26] and dishes are designed to herald the arrival of the four seasons or calendar months.

Seasonality means taking advantage of the "fruit of the mountains" (山の幸, yama no sachi, alt. "bounty of the mountains") (for example, bamboo shoots in spring, chestnuts in the autumn) as well as the "fruit of the sea" (海の幸, umi no sachi, alt. "bounty of the sea") as they come into season. Thus the first catch of skipjack tunas (初鰹, hatsu-gatsuo) that arrives with the Kuroshio Current has traditionally been greatly prized.[27]

If something becomes available rather earlier than what is usual for the item in question, the first crop or early catch is called hashiri.[28]

Use of tree leaves and branches as decor is also characteristic of Japanese cuisine. Maple leaves are often floated on water to exude coolness or ryō (); sprigs of nandina are popularly used. The haran (Aspidistra) and sasa bamboo leaves were often cut into shapes and placed underneath or used as separators.[29]

Traditional ingredients

A characteristic of traditional Japanese food is the sparing use of red meat, oils and fats, and dairy products.[30] Use of ingredients such as soy sauce, miso, and umeboshi tends to result in dishes with high salt content, though there are low-sodium versions of these available.

Meat consumption

As Japan is an island nation surrounded by an ocean, its people have always taken advantage of the abundant seafood supply.[25] It is the opinion of some food scholars that the Japanese diet always relied mainly on "grains with vegetables or seaweeds as main, with poultry secondary, and red meat in slight amounts" even before the advent of Buddhism which placed an even stronger taboo.[25] The eating of "four-legged creatures" (四足, yotsuashi) was spoken of as taboo,[31] unclean or something to be avoided by personal choice through the Edo period.[32] The consumption of whale and terrapin meat were not forbidden under this definition. Despite this, the consumption of red meat did not completely disappear in Japan. Eating wild game—as opposed to domesticated livestock—was tolerated; in particular, trapped hare was counted using the measure word wa (), a term normally reserved for birds.

In 1872 of the Meiji restoration, as part of the opening up of Japan to Western influence, Emperor Meiji lifted the ban on the consumption of red meat.[33] The removal of the ban encountered resistance and in one notable response, ten monks attempted to break into the Imperial Palace. The monks asserted that due to foreign influence, large numbers of Japanese had begun eating meat and that this was "destroying the soul of the Japanese people." Several of the monks were killed during the break-in attempt, and the remainder were arrested.[33][24] On the other hand, the consumption of meat was accepted by the common people. Gyūnabe (beef hot pot), the prototype of Sukiyaki, became the rage of the time. Western restaurants moved in, and some of them changed their form to Yōshoku.

Vegetable consumption has dwindled while processed foods have become more prominent in Japanese households due to the rising costs of general foodstuffs.[34] Nonetheless, Kyoto vegetables, or Kyoyasai, are rising in popularity and different varieties of Kyoto vegetables are being revived.[35]

Cooking oil

Generally speaking, traditional Japanese cuisine is prepared with little cooking oil. A major exception is the deep-frying of foods. This cooking method was introduced during the Edo period due to influence from Western (formerly called nanban-ryōri (南蛮料理)) and Chinese cuisine,[36] and became commonplace with the availability of cooking oil due to increased productivity.[36] Dishes such as tempura, aburaage, and satsuma age[36] are now part of established traditional Japanese cuisine. Words such as tempura or hiryōzu (synonymous with ganmodoki) are said to be of Portuguese origin.

Also, certain rustic sorts of traditional Japanese foods such as kinpira, hijiki, and kiriboshi daikon usually involve stir-frying in oil before stewing in soy sauce. Some standard osōzai or obanzai dishes feature stir-fried Japanese greens with either age or chirimen-jako [ja], dried sardines.

Seasonings

 
The use of soy sauce is prevalent in Japanese cuisine.

Traditional Japanese food is typically seasoned with a combination of dashi, soy sauce, sake and mirin, vinegar, sugar, and salt. A modest number of herbs and spices may be used during cooking as a hint or accent, or as a means of neutralizing fishy or gamy odors present. Examples of such spices include ginger, perilla and takanotsume [ja] (鷹の爪) red pepper.[37]

Intense condiments such as wasabi or Japanese mustard are provided as condiments to raw fish, due to their effect on the mucus membrane which paralyze the sense of smell, particularly from fish odors.[38] A sprig of mitsuba or a piece of yuzu rind floated on soups are called ukimi. Minced shiso leaves and myoga often serve as yakumi, a type of condiment paired with tataki of katsuo or soba. Shichimi is also a very popular spice mixture often added to soups, noodles and rice cakes. Shichimi is a chilli-based spice mix which contains seven spices: chilli, sansho, orange peel, black sesame, white sesame, hemp, ginger, and nori.[39]

Garnishes

Once a main dish has been cooked, spices such as minced ginger and various pungent herbs may be added as a garnish, called tsuma. Finally, a dish may be garnished with minced seaweed in the form of crumpled nori or flakes of aonori.[citation needed]

Inedible garnishes are featured in dishes to reflect a holiday or the season. Generally these include inedible leaves, flowers native to Japan or with a long history of being grown in the country, as well as their artificial counterparts.[40]

Salads

 
Japanese boiled spinach salad (ohitashi)

The o-hitashi or hitashi-mono (おひたし)[16] is boiled green-leaf vegetables bunched and cut to size, steeped in dashi broth,[41][42] eaten with dashes of soy sauce. Another item is sunomono (酢の物, "vinegar item"), which could be made with wakame seaweed,[43] or be something like a kōhaku namasu (紅白なます, "red white namasu")[44] made from thin toothpick slices of daikon and carrot. The so-called vinegar that is blended with the ingredient here is often sanbaizu [ja] (三杯酢, "three cupful/spoonful vinegar")[43] which is a blend of vinegar, mirin, and soy sauce. A tosazu [ja] (土佐酢, "Tosa vinegar") adds katsuo dashi to this.

An aemono [ja] (和え物) is another group of items, describable as a sort of "tossed salad" or "dressed" (though aemono also includes thin strips of squid or fish sashimi (itozukuri) etc. similarly prepared). One types are goma-ae (胡麻和え)[45] where usually vegetables such as green beans are tossed with white or black sesame seeds ground in a suribachi mortar bowl, flavored additionally with sugar and soy sauce. Shira-ae (白和え) adds tofu (bean curd) in the mix.[45] An aemono is tossed with vinegar-white miso mix and uses wakegi[45] scallion and baka-gai (バカガイ / 馬鹿貝, a trough shell, Mactra chinensis) as standard.

Cooking techniques

Different cooking techniques are applied to each of the three okazu; they may be raw (sashimi), grilled, simmered (sometimes called boiled), steamed, deep-fried, vinegared, or dressed.

Dishes

In ichijū-sansai (一汁三菜, "one soup, three sides"), the word sai () has the basic meaning of "vegetable", but secondarily means any accompanying dish (whether it uses fish or meat),[46] with the more familiar combined form sōzai [ja] (惣菜),[46] which is a term for any side dish, such as the vast selections sold at Japanese supermarkets or depachikas [ja].[47]

It figures in the Japanese word for appetizer, zensai (前菜); main dish, shusai (主菜); or sōzai (惣菜) (formal synonym for okazu), but the latter is considered somewhat of a ladies' term or nyōbō kotoba.[48]

 
Tempura battered and deep fried seafood and vegetables
 
Yakitori grilled chicken

Below are listed some of the most common categories for prepared food:

  • Yakimono (焼き物), grilled and pan-fried dishes
  • Nimono (煮物), stewed/simmered/cooked/boiled dishes
  • Itamemono (炒め物), stir-fried dishes
  • Mushimono (蒸し物), steamed dishes
  • Agemono (揚げ物), deep-fried dishes
  • Sashimi (刺身), sliced raw fish
  • Suimono (吸い物) and shirumono (汁物), soups
  • Tsukemono (漬け物), pickled/salted vegetables
  • Aemono (和え物), dishes dressed with various kinds of sauce
  • Sunomono (酢の物), vinegared dishes
  • Chinmi (珍味), delicacies[16]

Classification

Kaiseki

Kaiseki, closely associated with tea ceremony (chanoyu), is a high form of hospitality through cuisine. The style is minimalist, extolling the aesthetics of wabi-sabi. Like the tea ceremony, appreciation of the diningware and vessels is part of the experience. In the modern standard form, the first course consists of ichijū-sansai (one soup, three dishes), followed by the serving of sake accompanied by dish(es) plated on a square wooden bordered tray of sorts called hassun (八寸). Sometimes another element called shiizakana (強肴) is served to complement the sake, for guests who are heavier drinkers.

Vegetarian

 
Nattō, Japanese soybean-based vegetarian food

Strictly vegetarian food is rare since even vegetable dishes are flavored with the ubiquitous dashi stock, usually made with katsuobushi (dried skipjack tuna flakes), and are therefore pescetarian more often than carnivorous. An exception is shōjin-ryōri (精進料理), vegetarian dishes developed by Buddhist monks. However, the advertised shōjin-ryōri at public eating places includes some non-vegetarian elements. Vegetarianism, fucha-ryōri [ja] (普茶料理) was introduced from China by the Ōbaku sect (a sub-sect of Zen Buddhism), and which some sources still regard as part of "Japanese cuisine".[25] The sect in Japan was founded by the priest Ingen (d. 1673), and is headquartered in Uji, Kyoto. The Japanese name for the common green bean takes after this priest who allegedly introduced the New World crop via China. One aspect of the fucha-ryōri practiced at the temple is the wealth of modoki-ryōri (もどき料理, "mock foods"), one example being mock-eel, made from strained tofu, with nori seaweed used expertly to mimic the black skin.[49] The secret ingredient used is grated gobō (burdock) roots.[50][51]

Masakazu Tada, Honorary Vice-President of the International Vegetarian Union for 25 years from 1960, stated that "Japan was vegetarian for 1,000 years". The taboo against eating meat was lifted in 1872 by the Meiji Emperor as part of an effort towards westernizing Japan.[24] British journalist J. W. Robertson Scott reported in the 1920s that the society was still 90% vegetarian, and 50–60% of the population ate fish only on festive occasions, probably due to poverty more than for any other reason.

Rice

 
Gyūdon beef rice bowl (right) and niku shoyu ramen beef noodle (left)

Rice has historically been the staple food of the Japanese people. Its fundamental importance is evident from the fact that the word for cooked rice, gohan or meshi, also stands for a "meal".[52] While rice has an ancient history of cultivation in Japan, its use as a staple has not been universal. Notably, in northern areas (northern Honshū and Hokkaidō), other grains such as wheat were more common into the 19th century.

In most of Japan, rice used to be consumed for almost every meal, and although a 2007 survey showed that 70% of Japanese still eat it once or twice a day, its popularity is now declining. In the 20th century there has been a shift in dietary habits, with an increasing number of people choosing wheat-based products (such as bread and noodles) over rice.[53]

Japanese rice is short-grained and becomes sticky when cooked. Most rice is sold as hakumai (白米, "white rice"), with the outer portion of the grains (糠, nuka) polished away. Unpolished brown rice (玄米, genmai) is considered less desirable, but its popularity has been increasing.[53]

Noodles

 
Udon noodles
 
Soba noodles

Japanese noodles often substitute for a rice-based meal. Soba (thin, grayish-brown noodles containing buckwheat flour) and udon (thick wheat noodles) are the main traditional noodles, while ramen is a modern import and now very popular. There are also other, less common noodles, such as somen (thin, white noodles containing wheat flour).

Japanese noodles, such as soba and udon, are eaten as a standalone, and usually not with a side dish, in terms of general custom. It may have toppings, but they are called gu (). The fried battered shrimp tempura sitting in a bowl of tempura-soba would be referred to as "the shrimp" or "the tempura", and not so much be referred to as a topping (gu). The identical toppings, if served as a dish to be eaten with plain white rice could be called okazu, so these terms are context-sensitive. Some noodle dishes derive their name from Japanese folklore, such as kitsune and tanuki, reflecting dishes in which the noodles can be changed, but the broth and garnishes correspond to their respective legend.[54]

Hot noodles are usually served in a bowl already steeped in their broth and are called kakesoba or kakeudon. Cold soba arrive unseasoned and heaped atop a zaru or seiro, and are picked up with a chopstick and dunked in their dip sauce. The broth is a soy-dashi-mirin type of mix; the dip is similar but more concentrated (heavier on soy sauce).

In the simple form, yakumi (condiments and spices) such as shichimi, nori, finely chopped scallions, wasabi, etc. are added to the noodles, besides the broth/dip sauce.

Udon may also be eaten in kama-age style, piping hot straight out of the boiling pot, and eaten with plain soy sauce and sometimes with raw egg also.

Japanese noodles are traditionally eaten by bringing the bowl close to the mouth, and sucking in the noodles with the aid of chopsticks. The resulting loud slurping noise is considered normal in Japan, although in the 2010s concerns began to be voiced about the slurping being offensive to others, especially tourists. The word nuuhara (ヌーハラ, from "nuudoru harasumento", noodle harassment) was coined to describe this.[55]

Sweets

Traditional Japanese sweets are known as wagashi. Ingredients such as red bean paste and mochi are used. More modern-day tastes includes green tea ice cream, a very popular flavor. Almost all manufacturers produce a version of it. Kakigōri is a shaved ice dessert flavored with syrup or condensed milk. It is usually sold and eaten at summer festivals. A dessert very popular amongst children in Japan is dorayaki. They are sweet pancakes filled with a sweet red bean paste. They are mostly eaten at room temperature but are also considered very delicious hot.

Beverages

Tea

Green tea may be served with most Japanese dishes. It is produced in Japan and prepared in various forms such as matcha, the tea used in the Japanese tea ceremony.[56]

Beer

Beer production started in Japan in the 1860s. The most commonly consumed beers in Japan are pale-colored light lagers, with an alcohol strength of around 5.0% ABV. Lager beers are the most commonly produced beer style in Japan, but beer-like beverages, made with lower levels of malts called Happoshu (発泡酒, literally, "bubbly alcohol") or non-malt Happousei (発泡性, literally "effervescence") have captured a large part of the market as tax is substantially lower on these products. Beer and its varieties have a market share of almost 2/3 of alcoholic beverages.

Small local microbreweries have also gained increasing popularity since the 1990s, supplying distinct tasting beers in a variety of styles that seek to match the emphasis on craftsmanship, quality, and ingredient provenance often associated with Japanese food.

Sake

Sake is a brewed rice beverage that typically contains 15–17% alcohol and is made by multiple fermentation of rice. At traditional formal meals, it is considered an equivalent to rice and is not simultaneously taken with other rice-based dishes, although this notion is typically no longer applied to modern, refined, premium ("ginjo") sake, which bear little resemblance to the sakes of even 100 years ago. Side dishes for sake are particularly called sakana or otsumami.

Sake is brewed in a highly labor-intensive process more similar to beer production than winemaking, hence, the common description of sake as rice "wine" is misleading. Sake is made with, by legal definition, strictly just four ingredients: special rice, water, koji, and special yeast.

As of 2014, Japan has some 1500 registered breweries,[57] which produce thousands of different sakes. Sake characteristics and flavor profiles vary with regionality, ingredients, and the styles (maintained by brewmaster guilds) that brewery leaders want to produce.

Sake flavor profiles lend extremely well to pairing with a wide variety of cuisines, including non-Japanese cuisines.

Shōchū

Shōchū is a distilled spirit that is typically made from barley, sweet potato, buckwheat, or rice. Shōchū is produced everywhere in Japan, but its production started in Kyushu.[58]

Whisky

Japanese whisky began commercial production in the early 20th century, and is now extremely popular, primarily consumed in highballs (ハイボール, haibōru). It is produced in the Scottish style, with malt whisky produced since the 1980s, and has won top international awards since the 2000s.

Wine

A domestic wine production exists since the 1860s yet most wine is imported. The total market share of wine on alcoholic beverages is about 3%.[59]

Regional cuisine

Japanese cuisine offers a vast array of regional specialties known as kyōdo-ryōri (郷土料理), many of them originating from dishes prepared using traditional recipes with local ingredients. Foods from the Kantō region taste very strong. For example, the dashi-based broth for serving udon noodles is heavy on dark soy sauce, similar to soba broth. On the other hand, Kansai region foods are lightly seasoned, with clear udon noodles.[60] made with light soy sauce.[61]

Traditional table settings

The traditional Japanese table setting has varied considerably over the centuries, depending primarily on the type of table common during a given era. Before the 19th century, small individual box tables (hakozen, 箱膳) or flat floor trays were set before each diner. Larger low tables (chabudai, ちゃぶ台) that accommodated entire families were gaining popularity by the beginning of the 20th century, but these gave way to Western-style dining tables and chairs by the end of the 20th century.

The traditional Japanese table setting is to place a bowl of rice on the diner’s left and to place a bowl of miso soup on the diner’s right side at the table. Behind these, each okazu is served on its own individual plate. Based on the standard three okazu formula, behind the rice and soup are three flat plates to hold the three okazu; one to far back left, one at far back right, and one in the center. Pickled vegetables are often served on the side but are not counted as part of the three okazu. Chopsticks are generally placed at the very front of the tray near the diner with pointed ends facing left and supported by a chopstick rest, or hashioki.[61]

Dining etiquette

Many restaurants and homes in Japan are equipped with Western-style chairs and tables. However, traditional Japanese low tables and cushions, usually found on tatami floors, are also very common. Tatami mats, which are made of straw, can be easily damaged and are hard to clean, thus shoes or any type of footwear are always taken off when stepping on tatami floors.[62]

When dining in a traditional tatami room, sitting upright on the floor is common. In a casual setting, men usually sit with their feet crossed and women sit with both legs to one side. Only men are supposed to sit cross-legged. The formal way of sitting for both sexes is a kneeling style known as seiza. To sit in a seiza position, one kneels on the floor with legs folded under the thighs and the buttocks resting on the heels.[62]

When dining out in a restaurant, the customers are guided to their seats by the host. The honored or eldest guest will usually be seated at the center of the table farthest from the entrance. In the home, the most important guest is also seated farthest away from the entrance. If there is a tokonoma, or alcove, in the room, the guest is seated in front of it. The host sits next to or closest to the entrance.[63]

In Japan, it is customary to say itadakimasu ("I [humbly] receive") before starting to eat a meal.[64] When saying itadakimasu, both hands are put together in front of the chest or on the lap. Itadakimasu is preceded by complimenting the appearance of food. The Japanese attach as much importance to the aesthetic arrangement of the food as its actual taste. Before touching the food, it is polite to compliment the host on his artistry.[citation needed] It is also a polite custom to wait for the eldest guest at the table to start eating before the other diners start.[citation needed] Another customary and important etiquette is to say go-chisō-sama deshita ("It was a feast") to the host after the meal and the restaurant staff when leaving.[65]

Dishes for special occasions

In Japanese tradition some dishes are strongly tied to a festival or event. These dishes include:

In some regions, on every first and fifteenth day of the month, people eat a mixture of rice and azuki (azuki meshi (小豆飯); see Sekihan).

Imported and adapted foods

Japan has a long history of importing food from other countries, some of which are now part of Japan's most popular cuisine. Ramen is considered an important part to their culinary history, to the extent where in survey of 2,000 Tokyo residents, instant ramen came up many times as a product they thought was an outstanding Japanese invention.[69] Believed to have originated in China, ramen became popular in Japan after the Second Sino-Japanese war (1937–1945), when many Chinese students were displaced to Japan.[70]

 
Curry is so widely consumed that it can be called a national dish.[71]

Curry is another popular imported dish and is ranked near the top of nearly all Japanese surveys for favorite foods. The average Japanese person eats curry at least once a week.[72] The origins of curry, as well many other foreign imports such as pan or bread, are linked to the emergence of yōshoku, or western cuisine. Yōshoku can be traced as far back as the late Muromachi period (1336–1573) during a culinary revolution called namban ryori (南蛮料理), which means "Southern barbarian cooking", as it is rooted in European cuisine.[70] This cuisine style was first seen in Nagasaki, which served as the point of contact between Europe and Japan at that point in time. Food items such as potatoes, corn, dairy products, as well as the hard candy kompeito (金平糖), spread during this time.[70] This cuisine became popular in the Meiji period, which is considered by many historians to be when Japan first opened itself to the outside world. Today, many of these imported items still hold a heavy presence in Japan.[citation needed]

Yōshoku – Foreign (Western) food, dishes[16]

Japan today abounds with home-grown, loosely Western-style food. Many of these were invented in the wake of the 1868 Meiji Restoration and the end of national seclusion, when the sudden influx of foreign (in particular, Western) culture led to many restaurants serving Western food, known as yōshoku (洋食), a shortened form of seiyōshoku (西洋食, "Western cuisine"), opening up in cities. Restaurants that serve these foods are called yōshokuya (洋食屋, "Western cuisine restaurants").[citation needed]

Many yōshoku items from that time have been adapted to a degree that they are now considered Japanese and are an integral part of any Japanese family menu. Many are served alongside rice and miso soup, and eaten with chopsticks. Yet, due to their origins these are still categorized as yōshoku as opposed to the more traditional washoku (和食, "Japanese cuisine").[73]

Chūka ryōri - Japanese Chinese cuisine

Chinese cuisine is one of the oldest the most common foreign cuisines in Japan, predating the introduction of Western food dishes into the country. Many Chinese dishes have been altered to suit Japanese palates in a type of cuisine known as "chuka ryori". Iconic dishes of chuka ryori include ramen, gyoza, and chukaman.

Okonomiyaki

 
Japanese pancake, Okonomiyaki

Okonomiyaki is a savoury pancake containing a variety of ingredients in a wheat-flour-based batter.[74]

Tonkatsu

 
Tonkatsu pork cutlet

Tonkatsu is a breaded, deep-fried pork cutlet. It is frequently served with tonkatsu sauce.[citation needed]

Curry

Curry was introduced by Anglo-Indian officers of the Royal Navy from India who brought curry powder to Japan in the Meiji period.[75] The Imperial Japanese Navy adopted curry to prevent beriberi. Overtime it was reinvented and adapted to suit Japanese tastes that it became uniquely Japanese.[75] It is consumed so much that it is considered a national dish.[71] Many recipes are on the menu of the JMSDF.[76] A variety of vegetables and meats are used to make Japanese curry, usually vegetables like onions, carrots, and potatoes. The types of meat used are beef, pork, and chicken. A popular dish is Katsu-karē which is a breaded deep-fried cutlet (tonkatsu; usually pork or chicken) with Japanese curry sauce.[77] Japanese curry can be found in foods such as curry udon, curry bread, and katsukarē, tonkatsu served with curry. It's very commonly made with rice beside the curry on the dish called "curry" (カレー, karē). This can be eaten during dinner.

Wafū burgers (Japanese-style burgers)

Hamburger chains active in Japan include McDonald's, Burger King, First Kitchen, Lotteria and MOS Burger. Many chains developed uniquely Japanese versions of American fast food such as the teriyaki burger, kinpira (sauté) rice burger, fried shrimp burgers, and green tea milkshakes.[citation needed]

Italian

High-class Japanese chefs have preserved many Italian seafood dishes that are forgotten in other countries. These include pasta with prawns, lobster (a specialty known in Italy as pasta all'aragosta), crab (an Italian specialty; in Japan it is served with a different species of crab), and pasta with sea urchin sauce (sea urchin pasta being a specialty of the Puglia region).[78]

Outside Japan

 
California roll, a fusion makizushi created outside of Japan

Many countries have imported portions of Japanese cuisine. Some may adhere to the traditional preparations of the cuisines, but in some cultures the dishes have been adapted to fit the palate of the local populace. In 1970s sushi travelled from Japan to Canada and the United States, it was modified to suit the American palate, and re-entered the Japanese market as "American Sushi".[79] An example of this phenomenon is the California roll, which was created in North America in the 1970s, rose in popularity across the United States through the 1980s, and thus sparked Japanese food's – more precisely, sushi's – global popularity.

In 2014, Japanese Restaurant Organization has selected potential countries where Japanese food is becoming increasingly popular, and conducted research concerning the Japanese restaurants abroad. These key nations or region are Taiwan, Hong Kong, China, Singapore, Thailand and Indonesia.[80] This was meant as an effort to promote Japanese cuisine and to expand the market of Japanese ingredients, products and foodstuffs. Numbers of Japanese foodstuff and seasoning brands such as Ajinomoto, Kikkoman, Nissin and Kewpie mayonnaise, are establishing production base in other Asian countries, such as China, Thailand and Indonesia.

Australia

Japanese cuisine is very popular in Australia, and Australians are becoming increasingly familiar with traditional Japanese foods.[81] Restaurants serving Japanese cuisine feature prominently in popular rankings, including Gourmet Traveller and The Good Food Guide.[82]

Sushi in particular has been described as being "as popular as sandwiches", particularly in large cities like Melbourne, Sydney, or Brisbane.[83] As such, sushi bars are a mainstay in shopping centre food courts, and are extremely common in cities and towns all over the country.[83]

Brazil

In Brazil, Japanese food is widespread due to the large Japanese-Brazilian population living in the country, which represents the largest Japanese community living outside Japan. Over the past years, many restaurant chains such as Koni Store[84] have opened, selling typical dishes such as the popular temaki. Yakisoba, which is readily available in all supermarkets, and often included in non-Japanese restaurant menus.[85]

Canada

In Canada, Japanese cuisine has become quite popular. Sushi, sashimi, and instant ramen are highly popular at opposite ends of the income scale, with instant ramen being a common low-budget meal. Sushi and sashimi takeout began in Vancouver and Toronto, and is now common throughout Canada. The largest supermarket chains all carry basic sushi and sashimi, and Japanese ingredients and instant ramen are readily available in most supermarkets. Most mid-sized mall food courts feature fast-food teppan cooking. Izakaya restaurants have surged in popularity. Higher-end ramen restaurants (as opposed to instant ramen noodles of variable quality) are increasingly common.[86]

Indonesia

 
Chicken teriyaki bento set,[87] including salmon sashimi, gyoza, salad and miso soup, served in a Japanese restaurant in Jakarta

In the ASEAN region, Indonesia is the second largest market for Japanese food, after Thailand. Japanese cuisine has been increasingly popular as the growth of the Indonesian middle-class expecting higher quality foods.[80] This is also contributed to the fact that Indonesia has large numbers of Japanese expatriates. The main concern is the halal issue. As a Muslim majority country, Indonesians expected that Japanese food served there are halal according to Islamic dietary law, which means no pork and alcohol allowed. Japanese restaurants in Indonesia often offer a set menu which include rice served with an array of Japanese favourites in a single setting. A set menu might include a choice of yakiniku or sukiyaki, including a sample of sushi, tempura, gyoza and miso soup. Quite authentic Japanese style izakaya and ramen shops can be found in Little Tokyo (Melawai) area in Blok M, South Jakarta, serving both Japanese expats and local clienteles.[88] Today, Japanese restaurants can be found in most of Indonesian major cities, with high concentration in Greater Jakarta area, Bandung, Surabaya and Bali.

In some cases, Japanese cuisine in Indonesia is often slanted to suit Indonesian taste. Hoka Hoka Bento in particular is an Indonesian-owned Japanese fast food restaurant chain that cater to the Indonesian clientele. As a result the foods served there have been adapted to suit Indonesians' taste. Examples of the change include stronger flavours compared to the authentic subtle Japanese taste, the preference for fried food, as well as the addition of sambal to cater to the Indonesians' preference for hot and spicy food.

 
Okonomiyaki and takoyaki served in a festival of 2018 Asian Games in Jakarta

Japanese food popularity also had penetrated street food culture, as modest Warjep or Warung Jepang (Japanese food stall) offer Japanese food such as tempura, okonomiyaki and takoyaki, at very moderately low prices.[89] Today, okonomiyaki and takoyaki are popular street fare in Jakarta and other Indonesian cities.[90][91] This is also pushed further by the Japanese convenience stores operating in Indonesia, such as 7-Eleven and Lawson offering Japanese favourites such as oden, chicken katsu (deep-fried chicken cutlet), chicken teriyaki and onigiri.[92]

Some chefs in Indonesian sushi establishment has created a Japanese-Indonesian fusion cuisine, such as krakatau roll, gado-gado roll, rendang roll and gulai ramen.[93] The idea of fusion cuisine between spicy Indonesian Padang and Japanese cuisine was thought because both cuisine traditions are well-liked by Indonesians.[94] Nevertheless, some of these Japanese eating establishments might strive to serve authentic Japanese cuisine abroad.[95] Numbers of Japanese chain restaurants has established their business in Indonesia, such as Yoshinoya gyūdon restaurant chain,[96] Gyu-Kaku yakiniku restaurant chain and Ajisen Ramen restaurant chain.

Mexico

In Mexico, certain Japanese restaurants have created what is known as "sushi Mexicano", in which spicy sauces and ingredients accompany the dish or are integrated in sushi rolls. The habanero and serrano chiles have become nearly standard and are referred to as chiles toreados, as they are fried, diced and tossed over a dish upon request.

Philippines

In the Philippines, Japanese cuisine is also popular among the local population.[97] The Philippines have been exposed to the influences from the Japanese, Indian and Chinese.[98] The cities of Davao and Metro Manila probably have the most Japanese influence in the country.[99][100] The popular dining spots for Japanese nationals are located in Makati, which is called as "Little Tokyo", a small area filled with restaurants specializing in different types of Japanese food. Some of the best Japanese no-frills restaurants in the Philippines can be found in Makati's "Little Tokyo" area.[101] In the Philippines, Halo-halo is derived from Japanese Kakigori. Halo-halo is believed to be an indigenized version of the Japanese kakigori class of desserts, originating from pre-war Japanese migrants into the islands. The earliest versions were composed only of cooked red beans or mung beans in crushed ice with sugar and milk, a dessert known locally as "mongo-ya". Over the years, more native ingredients were added, resulting in the development of the modern halo-halo.[102][103] Some authors specifically attribute it to the 1920s or 1930s Japanese migrants in the Quinta Market of Quiapo, Manila, due to its proximity to the now defunct Insular Ice Plant, which was the source of the city's ice supply.[104] In Cebu City, the Little Kyoto district let's you experience the feel of being in Kyoto, Japan with a statue of the reclining Buddha overlooking the city. The Little Kyoto district also features Japanese food stalls serving various Japanese dishes like Takoyaki, Tempura, and various other Japanese cuisine that is enjoyed by the people of Cebu City, Philippines.[105][106] Odong, also called pancit odong, is a Visayan noodle soup made with odong noodles, canned smoked sardines (tinapa) in tomato sauce, bottle gourd (upo), loofah (patola), chayote, ginger, garlic, red onions, and various other vegetables. It is garnished and spiced with black pepper, scallions, toasted garlic, calamansi, or labuyo chilis.[107][108][109][110] The dish is usually prepared as a soup, but it can also be cooked with minimal water, in which case, it is known as odong guisado.[111]

It is a common simple and cheap meal in Mindanao (particularly the Davao Region) and the Visayas Islands.[112][111][113] It is almost always eaten with white rice, rarely on its own.[111]

It is named after the round flour noodles called odong which are closest in texture and taste to the Okinawa soba. These noodles are characteristically sold dried into straight sticks around 6 to 8 in (15 to 20 cm) long.[113] The name is derived from the Japanese udon noodles, although it does not use udon noodles or bear any resemblance to udon dishes. It originates from the Davao Region of Mindanao[114] which had a large Japanese migrant community in the early 1900s.[115] The odong noodles were previously locally manufactured by Okinawans, but modern odong noodles (which are distinctly yellowish) are imported from China.[114] Because odong noodles are difficult to find in other regions, they can be substituted with other types of noodles; including misua, miki (egg noodles), udon, and even instant noodles.[109][111]

Taiwan

Japan and Taiwan have shared close historical and cultural relations. Dishes such as sushi, ramen, and donburi are very popular among locals. Japanese chain restaurants such as Coco Ichibanya, Ippudo, Kura Sushi, Marugame Seimen, Mister Donut, MOS Burger, Ootoya, Ramen Kagetsu Arashi, Saizeriya, Sukiya, Sushiro, Tonkatsu Shinjuku Saboten, Yayoi Ken, and Yoshinoya, can all be found in Taiwan, among others. Taiwan has adapted many Japanese food items. Tianbula ("Taiwanese tempura") is actually satsuma-age and was introduced to Taiwan during Japanese rule by people from Kyushu, where the word tempura is commonly used to refer to satsuma-age.[116][117][118] It is popular as a night market snack and as an ingredient for oden, hot pot and lu wei. Taiwanese versions of oden are sold locally as olen or, more recently, as guandongzhu (from Japanese Kantō-ni) in convenience stores.

Thailand

In Southeast Asia, Thailand is the largest market for Japanese food. This is partly because Thailand is a popular tourist destination, having large numbers of Japanese expatriates, as well as the local population having developed a taste for authentic Japanese cuisine. According to the Organisation that Promote Japanese Restaurants Abroad (JRO), the number of Japanese restaurants in Thailand jumped about 2.2-fold from 2007's figures to 1,676 in June 2012. In Bangkok, Japanese restaurants accounts for 8.3 percent of all restaurants, following those that serve Thai.[119] Numbers of Japanese chain restaurants has established their business in Thailand, such as Yoshinoya gyūdon restaurant chain, Gyu-Kaku yakiniku restaurant chain and Kourakuen ramen restaurant chain.

United Kingdom

 
A branch of Kokoro in Sutton High Street, Sutton, Greater London

Japanese food Inspired restaurant chains in the UK include Wagamama, YO! Sushi, Nudo Sushi Box, Wasabi, Bone Daddies and Kokoro, often localising the food and mixing in other ingredients originating from Southeast Asia and India.

United States

The California roll has been influential in sushi's global popularity; its invention often credited to a Japanese-born chef working in Los Angeles, with dates assigned to 1973, or even 1964.[120][121] The dish has been snubbed by some purist sushi chefs,[120] and also likened to the America-born chop suey by one scholar.[121]

As of 2015 the country has about 4,200 sushi restaurants.[122] It is one of the most popular styles of sushi in the US market. Japanese cuisine is an integral part of food culture in Hawaii as well as in other parts of the United States. Popular items are sushi, sashimi, and teriyaki. Kamaboko, known locally as fish cake, is a staple of saimin, a noodle soup that is a local favorite in Hawaii.[123] Sushi, long regarded as quite exotic in the west until the 1970s, has become a popular health food in parts of North America, Western Europe and Asia.

Two of the first Japanese restaurants in the United States were Saito and Nippon. Restaurants such as these popularized dishes such as sukiyaki and tempura, while Nippon was the first restaurant in Manhattan to have a dedicated sushi bar.[124] Nippon was also one of the first Japanese restaurants in the U.S. to grow and process their own soba[125] and responsible for creation of the now standard beef negimayaki dish.[126]

In the U.S., the teppanyaki "iron hot plate" cooking restaurant took foothold. Such restaurants featured steak, shrimp and vegetables (including bean sprouts), cooked in front of the customer on a "teppanyaki grill" (teppan) by a personal chef who turns cooking into performance art, twirling and juggling cutting knives like batons. The meal would be served with steamed rice and Japanese soup. This style of cooking was made popular in the U.S. when Rocky Aoki founded his popular restaurant chain Benihana in 1964.[127][128] In Japan this type of cooking is thought to be American food, but in the U.S. it is thought to be Japanese. Aoki thought this would go over better in the U.S. than traditional Japanese cuisine because he felt that Americans enjoyed "eating in exotic surroundings, but are deeply mistrustful of exotic foods”.[129]

Cultural heritage

In February 2012, the Agency for Cultural Affairs recommended that 'Washoku: Traditional Dietary Cultures of the Japanese' be added to the UNESCO Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.[130] On December 4, 2013, "Washoku, traditional dietary cultures [sic] of the Japanese, notably for the celebration of New Year" was added to UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage, bringing the number of Japanese assets listed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list to 22.[131][132]

Food controversies

 
Whale meat sashimi, one of the most controversial Japanese dishes

Some elements of Japanese cuisine involving eating live seafood, such as Ikizukuri and Odori ebi, have received criticism overseas as a form of animal cruelty.[133]

Japanese cuisine is heavily dependent on seafood products. About 45 kilograms of seafood are consumed per capita annually in Japan, more than most other developed countries.[134] An aspect of environmental concern is Japanese appetite for seafood, which could contribute to the depletion of natural ocean resources. For example, Japan consumes 80% of the global supply of blue fin tuna, a popularly sought sushi and sashimi ingredient, which could lead to its extinction due to commercial overfishing.[135] Another environmental concern is commercial whaling and the consumption of whale meat, for which Japan is the world's largest market.[136][137]

See also

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Works cited

  • Andoh, Elizabeth (2010), Kansha: Celebrating Japan's Vegan and Vegetarian Traditions, Random House Digital, ISBN 978-1-58008-955-5
  • Andoh, Elizabeth (2012), Washoku: Recipes from the Japanese Home Kitchen, Random House Digital, ISBN 978-0-307-81355-8
  • Cawthorn, M. W. (1997). "Meat consumption from stranded whales and marine mammals in New Zealand: Public health and other issues" (PDF). Conservation Advisory Science Notes. Wellington, New Zealand: Department of Conservation (164). ISSN 1171-9834. (PDF) from the original on December 6, 2013.
  • Hepburn, James Curtis (1888). A Japanese-English and English-Japanese Dictionary (4 ed.). Tokyo: Z.P. Maruya & Company.
  • Kiple, Kenneth F.; Ornelas, Kriemhild (2000). . Vol. 2. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-40216-6. Archived from the original on May 4, 2012.
  • Shimbo, Hiroko (2000), The Japanese Kitchen: 250 Recipes in a Traditional Spirit, Harvard Common Press, ISBN 978-1-55832-177-9
  • Tsuji, Shizuo; Fisher, M.F.K.; Reichl, Ruth (2006), Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art, Kodansha International, ISBN 978-4-7700-3049-8

Further reading

  • Cwiertka, Katarzyna Joanna (2006), Modern Japanese Cuisine: Food, Power And National Identity, Reaktion Books, ISBN 978-1-86189-298-0
  • Francks, Penelope. "Diet and the comparison of living standards across the Great Divergence: Japanese food history in an English mirror." Journal of Global History 14.1 (2019): 3-21.
  • Rath, Eric C. (2010), Food and Fantasy in Early Modern Japan, University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-26227-0

External links

japanese, cuisine, encompasses, regional, traditional, foods, japan, which, have, developed, through, centuries, political, economic, social, changes, traditional, cuisine, japan, japanese, washoku, based, rice, with, miso, soup, other, dishes, there, emphasis. Japanese cuisine encompasses the regional and traditional foods of Japan which have developed through centuries of political economic and social changes The traditional cuisine of Japan Japanese washoku is based on rice with miso soup and other dishes there is an emphasis on seasonal ingredients Side dishes often consist of fish pickled vegetables and vegetables cooked in broth Seafood is common often grilled but also served raw as sashimi or in sushi Seafood and vegetables are also deep fried in a light batter as tempura Apart from rice a staple includes noodles such as soba and udon Japan also has many simmered dishes such as fish products in broth called oden or beef in sukiyaki and nikujaga Osechi new year special dishes Historically influenced by Chinese cuisine Japanese cuisine has also opened up to influence from Western cuisines in the modern era Dishes inspired by foreign food in particular Chinese food like ramen and gyōza as well as foods like spaghetti curry and hamburgers have been adapted to Japanese tastes and ingredients Some regional dishes have also become familiar throughout Japan including the taco rice staple of Okinawan cuisine that has itself been influenced by American and Mexican culinary traditions 1 Traditionally the Japanese shunned meat as a result of adherence to Buddhism but with the modernization of Japan in the 1880s meat based dishes such as tonkatsu and yakiniku have become common Since this time Japanese cuisine particularly sushi and ramen has become popular globally In 2011 Japan overtook France to become the country with the most 3 starred Michelin restaurants as of 2018 update the capital of Tokyo has maintained the title of the city with the most 3 starred restaurants in the world 2 In 2013 Japanese cuisine was added to the UNESCO Intangible Heritage List 3 Contents 1 Terminology 2 Traditional cuisine 3 History 4 Seasonality 5 Traditional ingredients 5 1 Meat consumption 5 2 Cooking oil 5 3 Seasonings 5 4 Garnishes 6 Salads 7 Cooking techniques 8 Dishes 9 Classification 9 1 Kaiseki 9 2 Vegetarian 10 Rice 11 Noodles 12 Sweets 13 Beverages 13 1 Tea 13 2 Beer 13 3 Sake 13 4 Shōchu 13 5 Whisky 13 6 Wine 14 Regional cuisine 15 Traditional table settings 16 Dining etiquette 17 Dishes for special occasions 18 Imported and adapted foods 18 1 Yōshoku Foreign Western food dishes 16 18 2 Chuka ryōri Japanese Chinese cuisine 18 3 Okonomiyaki 18 4 Tonkatsu 18 5 Curry 18 6 Wafu burgers Japanese style burgers 18 7 Italian 19 Outside Japan 19 1 Australia 19 2 Brazil 19 3 Canada 19 4 Indonesia 19 5 Mexico 19 6 Philippines 19 7 Taiwan 19 8 Thailand 19 9 United Kingdom 19 10 United States 20 Cultural heritage 21 Food controversies 22 See also 23 References 23 1 Works cited 24 Further reading 25 External linksTerminology Edit A Japanese meal including tempura sashimi and miso soup The word washoku 和食 is now the common word for traditional Japanese cooking The term kappō ja 割烹 lit cutting and boiling meats is synonymous with cooking but became a reference to mostly Japanese cooking or restaurants and was much used in the Meiji and Taishō eras 4 5 It has come to connote a certain standard perhaps even of the highest caliber a restaurant with the most highly trained chefs 6 However kappō is generally seen as an eating establishment which is slightly more casual or informal compared to the kaiseki 7 The kaiseki 懐石 lit warming stone is tied with the Japanese tea ceremony 8 The kaiseki is considered a simplified form of honzen ryōri 本膳料理 lit main tray cooking 9 which was formal banquet dining where several trays of food was served 10 The homophone term kaiseki ryōri 会席料理 lit gathering seating originally referred to a gathering of composers of haiku or renga and the simplified version of the honzen dishes served at the poem parties became kaiseki ryōri 11 However the meaning of kaiseki ryōri degenerated to become just another term for a sumptuous carousing banquet or shuen 酒宴 12 Traditional cuisine EditJapanese cuisine is based on combining the staple food which is steamed white rice or gohan 御飯 with one or more okazu main or side dishes This may be accompanied by a clear or miso soup and tsukemono pickles The phrase ichiju sansai 一汁三菜 one soup three sides refers to the makeup of a typical meal served but has roots in classic kaiseki honzen and yushoku cuisine The term is also used to describe the first course served in standard kaiseki cuisine nowadays 12 The origin of Japanese one soup three sides cuisine is a dietary style called Ichiju Issai 一汁一菜 one soup one dish 13 tracing back to the Five Great Zen Temples of the 12 century Kamakura period Kamakura Gozan developed as a form of meal that emphasized frugality and simplicity Rice is served in its own small bowl chawan and each main course item is placed on its own small plate sara or bowl hachi for each individual portion This is done even in Japanese homes This contrasts with Western style home dinners in which each individual takes helpings from large serving dishes of food placed in the middle of the dining table Japanese style traditionally abhors different flavored dishes touching each other on a single plate so different dishes are given their own individual plates as mentioned or are partitioned using for example leaves Placing main dishes on top of rice thereby soiling it is also frowned upon by traditional etiquette 14 Breakfast at a ryokan Japanese inn featuring grilled mackerel Kansai style dashimaki egg tofu in kaminabe paper pot Although this tradition of not placing other foods on rice originated from classical Chinese dining formalities especially after the adoption of Buddhist tea ceremonies it became most popular and common during and after the Kamakura period such as in the kaiseki Although present day Chinese cuisine has abandoned this practice Japanese cuisine retains it One exception is the popular donburi in which toppings are directly served on rice The small rice bowl 茶碗 chawan literally tea bowl doubles as a word for the large tea bowls in tea ceremonies Thus in common speech the drinking cup is referred to as yunomi jawan or yunomi for the purpose of distinction Among the nobility each course of a full course Japanese meal would be brought on serving napkins called zen 膳 which were originally platformed trays or small dining tables In the modern age faldstool trays or stackup type legged trays may still be seen used in zashiki i e tatami mat rooms for large banquets or at a ryokan type inn Some restaurants might use the suffix zen 膳 as a more sophisticated though dated synonym to the more familiar teishoku 定食 since the latter basically is a term for a combo meal served at a taishu shokudō akin to a diner 15 Teishoku means a meal of fixed menu for example grilled fish with rice and soup a dinner a prix fixe 16 served at shokudō 食堂 dining hall or ryōriten 料理店 restaurant which is somewhat vague shokudō can mean a diner type restaurant or a corporate lunch hall writer on Japanese popular culture Ishikawa Hiroyoshi 17 defines it as fare served at teishoku dining halls 定食食堂 teishoku shokudō and comparable diner like establishments History Edit Osechi new year dishes Main article History of Japanese cuisine Rice is a staple in Japanese cuisine Wheat and soybeans were introduced shortly after rice All three act as staple foods in Japanese cuisine today At the end of the Kofun Period and beginning of the Asuka Period Buddhism became the official religion of the country Therefore eating meat and fish was prohibited In 675 AD Emperor Tenmu prohibited the eating of horses dogs monkeys and chickens 18 In the 8th and 9th centuries many emperors continued to prohibit killing many types of animals The number of regulated meats increased significantly leading to the banning of all mammals except whale which were categorized as fish 19 During the Asuka period chopsticks were introduced to Japan Initially they were only used by the nobility 20 The general population used their hands as utensils were quite expensive Due to the lack of meat products Japanese people minimized spice utilization Spices were rare to find at the time Spices like pepper and garlic were only used in a minimalist amount In the absence of meat fish was served as the main protein as Japan is an island nation Fish has influenced many iconic Japanese dishes today In the 9th century grilled fish and sliced raw fish were widely popular 21 Japanese people who could afford it would eat fish at every meal others would have to make do without animal protein for many of their meals In traditional Japanese cuisine oil and fat are usually avoided within the cooking process because Japanese people were trying to keep a healthy lifestyle 21 Preserving fish became a sensation sushi was originated as a means of preserving fish by fermenting it in boiled rice Fish that are salted and then placed in rice are preserved by lactic acid fermentation which helps prevent the proliferation of the bacteria that bring about putrefaction 22 During the 15th century advancement and development helped shorten the fermentation of sushi to about one to two weeks Sushi thus became a popular snack food and main entree combining fish with rice During the late Edo period early 19th century sushi without fermentation was introduced Sushi was still being consumed with and without fermentation till the 19th century when the hand rolled and nigri type sushi was invented 23 In 1854 Japan started to gain new trade deals with Western countries when a new Japanese ruling order took over known as the Meiji Restoration Emperor Meiji the new ruler staged a New Years feast designed to embrace the Western world and countries in 1872 The feast contained food that had a lot of European emphases citation needed For the first time in a thousand years people were allowed to consume meat in public After this New Years feast the general population from Japan started to consume meat again 24 Seasonality Edit Kaiseki appetizers on a wooden plate Emphasis is placed on seasonality of food or shun 旬 25 26 and dishes are designed to herald the arrival of the four seasons or calendar months Seasonality means taking advantage of the fruit of the mountains 山の幸 yama no sachi alt bounty of the mountains for example bamboo shoots in spring chestnuts in the autumn as well as the fruit of the sea 海の幸 umi no sachi alt bounty of the sea as they come into season Thus the first catch of skipjack tunas 初鰹 hatsu gatsuo that arrives with the Kuroshio Current has traditionally been greatly prized 27 If something becomes available rather earlier than what is usual for the item in question the first crop or early catch is called hashiri 28 Use of tree leaves and branches as decor is also characteristic of Japanese cuisine Maple leaves are often floated on water to exude coolness or ryō 涼 sprigs of nandina are popularly used The haran Aspidistra and sasa bamboo leaves were often cut into shapes and placed underneath or used as separators 29 Traditional ingredients EditFurther information History of Japanese cuisine and List of Japanese ingredients A characteristic of traditional Japanese food is the sparing use of red meat oils and fats and dairy products 30 Use of ingredients such as soy sauce miso and umeboshi tends to result in dishes with high salt content though there are low sodium versions of these available Meat consumption Edit Yakiniku As Japan is an island nation surrounded by an ocean its people have always taken advantage of the abundant seafood supply 25 It is the opinion of some food scholars that the Japanese diet always relied mainly on grains with vegetables or seaweeds as main with poultry secondary and red meat in slight amounts even before the advent of Buddhism which placed an even stronger taboo 25 The eating of four legged creatures 四足 yotsuashi was spoken of as taboo 31 unclean or something to be avoided by personal choice through the Edo period 32 The consumption of whale and terrapin meat were not forbidden under this definition Despite this the consumption of red meat did not completely disappear in Japan Eating wild game as opposed to domesticated livestock was tolerated in particular trapped hare was counted using the measure word wa 羽 a term normally reserved for birds In 1872 of the Meiji restoration as part of the opening up of Japan to Western influence Emperor Meiji lifted the ban on the consumption of red meat 33 The removal of the ban encountered resistance and in one notable response ten monks attempted to break into the Imperial Palace The monks asserted that due to foreign influence large numbers of Japanese had begun eating meat and that this was destroying the soul of the Japanese people Several of the monks were killed during the break in attempt and the remainder were arrested 33 24 On the other hand the consumption of meat was accepted by the common people Gyunabe beef hot pot the prototype of Sukiyaki became the rage of the time Western restaurants moved in and some of them changed their form to Yōshoku Vegetable consumption has dwindled while processed foods have become more prominent in Japanese households due to the rising costs of general foodstuffs 34 Nonetheless Kyoto vegetables or Kyoyasai are rising in popularity and different varieties of Kyoto vegetables are being revived 35 Cooking oil Edit Generally speaking traditional Japanese cuisine is prepared with little cooking oil A major exception is the deep frying of foods This cooking method was introduced during the Edo period due to influence from Western formerly called nanban ryōri 南蛮料理 and Chinese cuisine 36 and became commonplace with the availability of cooking oil due to increased productivity 36 Dishes such as tempura aburaage and satsuma age 36 are now part of established traditional Japanese cuisine Words such as tempura or hiryōzu synonymous with ganmodoki are said to be of Portuguese origin Also certain rustic sorts of traditional Japanese foods such as kinpira hijiki and kiriboshi daikon usually involve stir frying in oil before stewing in soy sauce Some standard osōzai or obanzai dishes feature stir fried Japanese greens with either age or chirimen jako ja dried sardines Seasonings Edit See also Japanese seasonings The use of soy sauce is prevalent in Japanese cuisine Traditional Japanese food is typically seasoned with a combination of dashi soy sauce sake and mirin vinegar sugar and salt A modest number of herbs and spices may be used during cooking as a hint or accent or as a means of neutralizing fishy or gamy odors present Examples of such spices include ginger perilla and takanotsume ja 鷹の爪 red pepper 37 Intense condiments such as wasabi or Japanese mustard are provided as condiments to raw fish due to their effect on the mucus membrane which paralyze the sense of smell particularly from fish odors 38 A sprig of mitsuba or a piece of yuzu rind floated on soups are called ukimi Minced shiso leaves and myoga often serve as yakumi a type of condiment paired with tataki of katsuo or soba Shichimi is also a very popular spice mixture often added to soups noodles and rice cakes Shichimi is a chilli based spice mix which contains seven spices chilli sansho orange peel black sesame white sesame hemp ginger and nori 39 Garnishes Edit Once a main dish has been cooked spices such as minced ginger and various pungent herbs may be added as a garnish called tsuma Finally a dish may be garnished with minced seaweed in the form of crumpled nori or flakes of aonori citation needed Inedible garnishes are featured in dishes to reflect a holiday or the season Generally these include inedible leaves flowers native to Japan or with a long history of being grown in the country as well as their artificial counterparts 40 Salads Edit Japanese boiled spinach salad ohitashi The o hitashi or hitashi mono おひたし 16 is boiled green leaf vegetables bunched and cut to size steeped in dashi broth 41 42 eaten with dashes of soy sauce Another item is sunomono 酢の物 vinegar item which could be made with wakame seaweed 43 or be something like a kōhaku namasu 紅白なます red white namasu 44 made from thin toothpick slices of daikon and carrot The so called vinegar that is blended with the ingredient here is often sanbaizu ja 三杯酢 three cupful spoonful vinegar 43 which is a blend of vinegar mirin and soy sauce A tosazu ja 土佐酢 Tosa vinegar adds katsuo dashi to this An aemono ja 和え物 is another group of items describable as a sort of tossed salad or dressed though aemono also includes thin strips of squid or fish sashimi itozukuri etc similarly prepared One types are goma ae 胡麻和え 45 where usually vegetables such as green beans are tossed with white or black sesame seeds ground in a suribachi mortar bowl flavored additionally with sugar and soy sauce Shira ae 白和え adds tofu bean curd in the mix 45 An aemono is tossed with vinegar white miso mix and uses wakegi 45 scallion and baka gai バカガイ 馬鹿貝 a trough shell Mactra chinensis as standard Cooking techniques EditDifferent cooking techniques are applied to each of the three okazu they may be raw sashimi grilled simmered sometimes called boiled steamed deep fried vinegared or dressed Dishes EditMain article List of Japanese dishes Further information okazu and sōzai 惣菜 In ichiju sansai 一汁三菜 one soup three sides the word sai 菜 has the basic meaning of vegetable but secondarily means any accompanying dish whether it uses fish or meat 46 with the more familiar combined form sōzai ja 惣菜 46 which is a term for any side dish such as the vast selections sold at Japanese supermarkets or depachikas ja 47 It figures in the Japanese word for appetizer zensai 前菜 main dish shusai 主菜 or sōzai 惣菜 formal synonym for okazu but the latter is considered somewhat of a ladies term or nyōbō kotoba 48 Tempura battered and deep fried seafood and vegetables Yakitori grilled chicken Below are listed some of the most common categories for prepared food Yakimono 焼き物 grilled and pan fried dishes Nimono 煮物 stewed simmered cooked boiled dishes Itamemono 炒め物 stir fried dishes Mushimono 蒸し物 steamed dishes Agemono 揚げ物 deep fried dishes Sashimi 刺身 sliced raw fish Suimono 吸い物 and shirumono 汁物 soups Tsukemono 漬け物 pickled salted vegetables Aemono 和え物 dishes dressed with various kinds of sauce Sunomono 酢の物 vinegared dishes Chinmi 珍味 delicacies 16 Classification EditKaiseki Edit Kaiseki closely associated with tea ceremony chanoyu is a high form of hospitality through cuisine The style is minimalist extolling the aesthetics of wabi sabi Like the tea ceremony appreciation of the diningware and vessels is part of the experience In the modern standard form the first course consists of ichiju sansai one soup three dishes followed by the serving of sake accompanied by dish es plated on a square wooden bordered tray of sorts called hassun 八寸 Sometimes another element called shiizakana 強肴 is served to complement the sake for guests who are heavier drinkers Vegetarian Edit Nattō Japanese soybean based vegetarian food Strictly vegetarian food is rare since even vegetable dishes are flavored with the ubiquitous dashi stock usually made with katsuobushi dried skipjack tuna flakes and are therefore pescetarian more often than carnivorous An exception is shōjin ryōri 精進料理 vegetarian dishes developed by Buddhist monks However the advertised shōjin ryōri at public eating places includes some non vegetarian elements Vegetarianism fucha ryōri ja 普茶料理 was introduced from China by the Ōbaku sect a sub sect of Zen Buddhism and which some sources still regard as part of Japanese cuisine 25 The sect in Japan was founded by the priest Ingen d 1673 and is headquartered in Uji Kyoto The Japanese name for the common green bean takes after this priest who allegedly introduced the New World crop via China One aspect of the fucha ryōri practiced at the temple is the wealth of modoki ryōri もどき料理 mock foods one example being mock eel made from strained tofu with nori seaweed used expertly to mimic the black skin 49 The secret ingredient used is grated gobō burdock roots 50 51 Masakazu Tada Honorary Vice President of the International Vegetarian Union for 25 years from 1960 stated that Japan was vegetarian for 1 000 years The taboo against eating meat was lifted in 1872 by the Meiji Emperor as part of an effort towards westernizing Japan 24 British journalist J W Robertson Scott reported in the 1920s that the society was still 90 vegetarian and 50 60 of the population ate fish only on festive occasions probably due to poverty more than for any other reason Rice EditMain article Japanese rice Gyudon beef rice bowl right and niku shoyu ramen beef noodle left Rice has historically been the staple food of the Japanese people Its fundamental importance is evident from the fact that the word for cooked rice gohan or meshi also stands for a meal 52 While rice has an ancient history of cultivation in Japan its use as a staple has not been universal Notably in northern areas northern Honshu and Hokkaidō other grains such as wheat were more common into the 19th century In most of Japan rice used to be consumed for almost every meal and although a 2007 survey showed that 70 of Japanese still eat it once or twice a day its popularity is now declining In the 20th century there has been a shift in dietary habits with an increasing number of people choosing wheat based products such as bread and noodles over rice 53 Japanese rice is short grained and becomes sticky when cooked Most rice is sold as hakumai 白米 white rice with the outer portion of the grains 糠 nuka polished away Unpolished brown rice 玄米 genmai is considered less desirable but its popularity has been increasing 53 Noodles EditMain article Japanese noodles Udon noodles Soba noodles Japanese noodles often substitute for a rice based meal Soba thin grayish brown noodles containing buckwheat flour and udon thick wheat noodles are the main traditional noodles while ramen is a modern import and now very popular There are also other less common noodles such as somen thin white noodles containing wheat flour Japanese noodles such as soba and udon are eaten as a standalone and usually not with a side dish in terms of general custom It may have toppings but they are called gu 具 The fried battered shrimp tempura sitting in a bowl of tempura soba would be referred to as the shrimp or the tempura and not so much be referred to as a topping gu The identical toppings if served as a dish to be eaten with plain white rice could be called okazu so these terms are context sensitive Some noodle dishes derive their name from Japanese folklore such as kitsune and tanuki reflecting dishes in which the noodles can be changed but the broth and garnishes correspond to their respective legend 54 Hot noodles are usually served in a bowl already steeped in their broth and are called kakesoba or kakeudon Cold soba arrive unseasoned and heaped atop a zaru or seiro and are picked up with a chopstick and dunked in their dip sauce The broth is a soy dashi mirin type of mix the dip is similar but more concentrated heavier on soy sauce In the simple form yakumi condiments and spices such as shichimi nori finely chopped scallions wasabi etc are added to the noodles besides the broth dip sauce Udon may also be eaten in kama age style piping hot straight out of the boiling pot and eaten with plain soy sauce and sometimes with raw egg also Japanese noodles are traditionally eaten by bringing the bowl close to the mouth and sucking in the noodles with the aid of chopsticks The resulting loud slurping noise is considered normal in Japan although in the 2010s concerns began to be voiced about the slurping being offensive to others especially tourists The word nuuhara ヌーハラ from nuudoru harasumento noodle harassment was coined to describe this 55 Sweets EditMain article Wagashi See also List of Japanese desserts and sweets See also List of Japanese sweets and snacks Traditional Japanese sweets are known as wagashi Ingredients such as red bean paste and mochi are used More modern day tastes includes green tea ice cream a very popular flavor Almost all manufacturers produce a version of it Kakigōri is a shaved ice dessert flavored with syrup or condensed milk It is usually sold and eaten at summer festivals A dessert very popular amongst children in Japan is dorayaki They are sweet pancakes filled with a sweet red bean paste They are mostly eaten at room temperature but are also considered very delicious hot Beverages EditMain article List of Japanese dishes Tea and other drinks Tea Edit Green tea may be served with most Japanese dishes It is produced in Japan and prepared in various forms such as matcha the tea used in the Japanese tea ceremony 56 Beer Edit Main article Beer in Japan Beer production started in Japan in the 1860s The most commonly consumed beers in Japan are pale colored light lagers with an alcohol strength of around 5 0 ABV Lager beers are the most commonly produced beer style in Japan but beer like beverages made with lower levels of malts called Happoshu 発泡酒 literally bubbly alcohol or non malt Happousei 発泡性 literally effervescence have captured a large part of the market as tax is substantially lower on these products Beer and its varieties have a market share of almost 2 3 of alcoholic beverages Small local microbreweries have also gained increasing popularity since the 1990s supplying distinct tasting beers in a variety of styles that seek to match the emphasis on craftsmanship quality and ingredient provenance often associated with Japanese food Sake Edit Sake is a brewed rice beverage that typically contains 15 17 alcohol and is made by multiple fermentation of rice At traditional formal meals it is considered an equivalent to rice and is not simultaneously taken with other rice based dishes although this notion is typically no longer applied to modern refined premium ginjo sake which bear little resemblance to the sakes of even 100 years ago Side dishes for sake are particularly called sakana or otsumami Sake is brewed in a highly labor intensive process more similar to beer production than winemaking hence the common description of sake as rice wine is misleading Sake is made with by legal definition strictly just four ingredients special rice water koji and special yeast As of 2014 Japan has some 1500 registered breweries 57 which produce thousands of different sakes Sake characteristics and flavor profiles vary with regionality ingredients and the styles maintained by brewmaster guilds that brewery leaders want to produce Sake flavor profiles lend extremely well to pairing with a wide variety of cuisines including non Japanese cuisines Shōchu Edit Shōchu is a distilled spirit that is typically made from barley sweet potato buckwheat or rice Shōchu is produced everywhere in Japan but its production started in Kyushu 58 Whisky Edit Main article Japanese whisky Japanese whisky began commercial production in the early 20th century and is now extremely popular primarily consumed in highballs ハイボール haibōru It is produced in the Scottish style with malt whisky produced since the 1980s and has won top international awards since the 2000s Wine Edit A domestic wine production exists since the 1860s yet most wine is imported The total market share of wine on alcoholic beverages is about 3 59 Regional cuisine EditMain article Japanese regional cuisine Japanese cuisine offers a vast array of regional specialties known as kyōdo ryōri 郷土料理 many of them originating from dishes prepared using traditional recipes with local ingredients Foods from the Kantō region taste very strong For example the dashi based broth for serving udon noodles is heavy on dark soy sauce similar to soba broth On the other hand Kansai region foods are lightly seasoned with clear udon noodles 60 made with light soy sauce 61 Traditional table settings EditThe traditional Japanese table setting has varied considerably over the centuries depending primarily on the type of table common during a given era Before the 19th century small individual box tables hakozen 箱膳 or flat floor trays were set before each diner Larger low tables chabudai ちゃぶ台 that accommodated entire families were gaining popularity by the beginning of the 20th century but these gave way to Western style dining tables and chairs by the end of the 20th century The traditional Japanese table setting is to place a bowl of rice on the diner s left and to place a bowl of miso soup on the diner s right side at the table Behind these each okazu is served on its own individual plate Based on the standard three okazu formula behind the rice and soup are three flat plates to hold the three okazu one to far back left one at far back right and one in the center Pickled vegetables are often served on the side but are not counted as part of the three okazu Chopsticks are generally placed at the very front of the tray near the diner with pointed ends facing left and supported by a chopstick rest or hashioki 61 Dining etiquette EditMain article Customs and etiquette in Japanese dining Many restaurants and homes in Japan are equipped with Western style chairs and tables However traditional Japanese low tables and cushions usually found on tatami floors are also very common Tatami mats which are made of straw can be easily damaged and are hard to clean thus shoes or any type of footwear are always taken off when stepping on tatami floors 62 When dining in a traditional tatami room sitting upright on the floor is common In a casual setting men usually sit with their feet crossed and women sit with both legs to one side Only men are supposed to sit cross legged The formal way of sitting for both sexes is a kneeling style known as seiza To sit in a seiza position one kneels on the floor with legs folded under the thighs and the buttocks resting on the heels 62 When dining out in a restaurant the customers are guided to their seats by the host The honored or eldest guest will usually be seated at the center of the table farthest from the entrance In the home the most important guest is also seated farthest away from the entrance If there is a tokonoma or alcove in the room the guest is seated in front of it The host sits next to or closest to the entrance 63 In Japan it is customary to say itadakimasu I humbly receive before starting to eat a meal 64 When saying itadakimasu both hands are put together in front of the chest or on the lap Itadakimasu is preceded by complimenting the appearance of food The Japanese attach as much importance to the aesthetic arrangement of the food as its actual taste Before touching the food it is polite to compliment the host on his artistry citation needed It is also a polite custom to wait for the eldest guest at the table to start eating before the other diners start citation needed Another customary and important etiquette is to say go chisō sama deshita It was a feast to the host after the meal and the restaurant staff when leaving 65 Dishes for special occasions EditIn Japanese tradition some dishes are strongly tied to a festival or event These dishes include Botamochi a sticky rice dumpling with sweet azuki paste served in spring while a similar sweet Ohagi is served in autumn Chimaki steamed sweet rice cake Tango no sekku and Gion Festival Hamo a type of fish often eel 66 and sōmen Gion Festival Osechi New Year Sekihan is red rice which is served for any celebratory occasion It is usually sticky rice cooked with azuki or red bean which gives the rice its distinctive red color 67 Soba 68 New Year s Eve This is called toshi koshi soba literally year crossing soba Chirashizushi Ushiojiru clear soup of clams and amazake Hinamatsuri In some regions on every first and fifteenth day of the month people eat a mixture of rice and azuki azuki meshi 小豆飯 see Sekihan Imported and adapted foods EditJapan has a long history of importing food from other countries some of which are now part of Japan s most popular cuisine Ramen is considered an important part to their culinary history to the extent where in survey of 2 000 Tokyo residents instant ramen came up many times as a product they thought was an outstanding Japanese invention 69 Believed to have originated in China ramen became popular in Japan after the Second Sino Japanese war 1937 1945 when many Chinese students were displaced to Japan 70 Curry is so widely consumed that it can be called a national dish 71 Curry is another popular imported dish and is ranked near the top of nearly all Japanese surveys for favorite foods The average Japanese person eats curry at least once a week 72 The origins of curry as well many other foreign imports such as pan or bread are linked to the emergence of yōshoku or western cuisine Yōshoku can be traced as far back as the late Muromachi period 1336 1573 during a culinary revolution called namban ryori 南蛮料理 which means Southern barbarian cooking as it is rooted in European cuisine 70 This cuisine style was first seen in Nagasaki which served as the point of contact between Europe and Japan at that point in time Food items such as potatoes corn dairy products as well as the hard candy kompeito 金平糖 spread during this time 70 This cuisine became popular in the Meiji period which is considered by many historians to be when Japan first opened itself to the outside world Today many of these imported items still hold a heavy presence in Japan citation needed Foods imported from Portugal in the 16th century Other adapted cuisines in JapanYōshoku Foreign Western food dishes 16 Edit Main article Yōshoku Japan today abounds with home grown loosely Western style food Many of these were invented in the wake of the 1868 Meiji Restoration and the end of national seclusion when the sudden influx of foreign in particular Western culture led to many restaurants serving Western food known as yōshoku 洋食 a shortened form of seiyōshoku 西洋食 Western cuisine opening up in cities Restaurants that serve these foods are called yōshokuya 洋食屋 Western cuisine restaurants citation needed Many yōshoku items from that time have been adapted to a degree that they are now considered Japanese and are an integral part of any Japanese family menu Many are served alongside rice and miso soup and eaten with chopsticks Yet due to their origins these are still categorized as yōshoku as opposed to the more traditional washoku 和食 Japanese cuisine 73 Chuka ryōri Japanese Chinese cuisine Edit Main article Japanese Chinese cuisine Chinese cuisine is one of the oldest the most common foreign cuisines in Japan predating the introduction of Western food dishes into the country Many Chinese dishes have been altered to suit Japanese palates in a type of cuisine known as chuka ryori Iconic dishes of chuka ryori include ramen gyoza and chukaman Okonomiyaki Edit Main article Okonomiyaki Japanese pancake Okonomiyaki Okonomiyaki is a savoury pancake containing a variety of ingredients in a wheat flour based batter 74 Tonkatsu Edit Tonkatsu pork cutlet Main article Tonkatsu Tonkatsu is a breaded deep fried pork cutlet It is frequently served with tonkatsu sauce citation needed Curry Edit Main article Japanese curry Curry was introduced by Anglo Indian officers of the Royal Navy from India who brought curry powder to Japan in the Meiji period 75 The Imperial Japanese Navy adopted curry to prevent beriberi Overtime it was reinvented and adapted to suit Japanese tastes that it became uniquely Japanese 75 It is consumed so much that it is considered a national dish 71 Many recipes are on the menu of the JMSDF 76 A variety of vegetables and meats are used to make Japanese curry usually vegetables like onions carrots and potatoes The types of meat used are beef pork and chicken A popular dish is Katsu kare which is a breaded deep fried cutlet tonkatsu usually pork or chicken with Japanese curry sauce 77 Japanese curry can be found in foods such as curry udon curry bread and katsukare tonkatsu served with curry It s very commonly made with rice beside the curry on the dish called curry カレー kare This can be eaten during dinner Wafu burgers Japanese style burgers Edit Hamburger chains active in Japan include McDonald s Burger King First Kitchen Lotteria and MOS Burger Many chains developed uniquely Japanese versions of American fast food such as the teriyaki burger kinpira saute rice burger fried shrimp burgers and green tea milkshakes citation needed Italian Edit Main article Itameshi High class Japanese chefs have preserved many Italian seafood dishes that are forgotten in other countries These include pasta with prawns lobster a specialty known in Italy as pasta all aragosta crab an Italian specialty in Japan it is served with a different species of crab and pasta with sea urchin sauce sea urchin pasta being a specialty of the Puglia region 78 Outside Japan Edit California roll a fusion makizushi created outside of Japan Many countries have imported portions of Japanese cuisine Some may adhere to the traditional preparations of the cuisines but in some cultures the dishes have been adapted to fit the palate of the local populace In 1970s sushi travelled from Japan to Canada and the United States it was modified to suit the American palate and re entered the Japanese market as American Sushi 79 An example of this phenomenon is the California roll which was created in North America in the 1970s rose in popularity across the United States through the 1980s and thus sparked Japanese food s more precisely sushi s global popularity In 2014 Japanese Restaurant Organization has selected potential countries where Japanese food is becoming increasingly popular and conducted research concerning the Japanese restaurants abroad These key nations or region are Taiwan Hong Kong China Singapore Thailand and Indonesia 80 This was meant as an effort to promote Japanese cuisine and to expand the market of Japanese ingredients products and foodstuffs Numbers of Japanese foodstuff and seasoning brands such as Ajinomoto Kikkoman Nissin and Kewpie mayonnaise are establishing production base in other Asian countries such as China Thailand and Indonesia Australia Edit Japanese cuisine is very popular in Australia and Australians are becoming increasingly familiar with traditional Japanese foods 81 Restaurants serving Japanese cuisine feature prominently in popular rankings including Gourmet Traveller and The Good Food Guide 82 Sushi in particular has been described as being as popular as sandwiches particularly in large cities like Melbourne Sydney or Brisbane 83 As such sushi bars are a mainstay in shopping centre food courts and are extremely common in cities and towns all over the country 83 Brazil Edit In Brazil Japanese food is widespread due to the large Japanese Brazilian population living in the country which represents the largest Japanese community living outside Japan Over the past years many restaurant chains such as Koni Store 84 have opened selling typical dishes such as the popular temaki Yakisoba which is readily available in all supermarkets and often included in non Japanese restaurant menus 85 Canada Edit In Canada Japanese cuisine has become quite popular Sushi sashimi and instant ramen are highly popular at opposite ends of the income scale with instant ramen being a common low budget meal Sushi and sashimi takeout began in Vancouver and Toronto and is now common throughout Canada The largest supermarket chains all carry basic sushi and sashimi and Japanese ingredients and instant ramen are readily available in most supermarkets Most mid sized mall food courts feature fast food teppan cooking Izakaya restaurants have surged in popularity Higher end ramen restaurants as opposed to instant ramen noodles of variable quality are increasingly common 86 Indonesia Edit Chicken teriyaki bento set 87 including salmon sashimi gyoza salad and miso soup served in a Japanese restaurant in Jakarta In the ASEAN region Indonesia is the second largest market for Japanese food after Thailand Japanese cuisine has been increasingly popular as the growth of the Indonesian middle class expecting higher quality foods 80 This is also contributed to the fact that Indonesia has large numbers of Japanese expatriates The main concern is the halal issue As a Muslim majority country Indonesians expected that Japanese food served there are halal according to Islamic dietary law which means no pork and alcohol allowed Japanese restaurants in Indonesia often offer a set menu which include rice served with an array of Japanese favourites in a single setting A set menu might include a choice of yakiniku or sukiyaki including a sample of sushi tempura gyoza and miso soup Quite authentic Japanese style izakaya and ramen shops can be found in Little Tokyo Melawai area in Blok M South Jakarta serving both Japanese expats and local clienteles 88 Today Japanese restaurants can be found in most of Indonesian major cities with high concentration in Greater Jakarta area Bandung Surabaya and Bali In some cases Japanese cuisine in Indonesia is often slanted to suit Indonesian taste Hoka Hoka Bento in particular is an Indonesian owned Japanese fast food restaurant chain that cater to the Indonesian clientele As a result the foods served there have been adapted to suit Indonesians taste Examples of the change include stronger flavours compared to the authentic subtle Japanese taste the preference for fried food as well as the addition of sambal to cater to the Indonesians preference for hot and spicy food Okonomiyaki and takoyaki served in a festival of 2018 Asian Games in Jakarta Japanese food popularity also had penetrated street food culture as modest Warjep or Warung Jepang Japanese food stall offer Japanese food such as tempura okonomiyaki and takoyaki at very moderately low prices 89 Today okonomiyaki and takoyaki are popular street fare in Jakarta and other Indonesian cities 90 91 This is also pushed further by the Japanese convenience stores operating in Indonesia such as 7 Eleven and Lawson offering Japanese favourites such as oden chicken katsu deep fried chicken cutlet chicken teriyaki and onigiri 92 Some chefs in Indonesian sushi establishment has created a Japanese Indonesian fusion cuisine such as krakatau roll gado gado roll rendang roll and gulai ramen 93 The idea of fusion cuisine between spicy Indonesian Padang and Japanese cuisine was thought because both cuisine traditions are well liked by Indonesians 94 Nevertheless some of these Japanese eating establishments might strive to serve authentic Japanese cuisine abroad 95 Numbers of Japanese chain restaurants has established their business in Indonesia such as Yoshinoya gyudon restaurant chain 96 Gyu Kaku yakiniku restaurant chain and Ajisen Ramen restaurant chain Mexico Edit In Mexico certain Japanese restaurants have created what is known as sushi Mexicano in which spicy sauces and ingredients accompany the dish or are integrated in sushi rolls The habanero and serrano chiles have become nearly standard and are referred to as chiles toreados as they are fried diced and tossed over a dish upon request Philippines Edit In the Philippines Japanese cuisine is also popular among the local population 97 The Philippines have been exposed to the influences from the Japanese Indian and Chinese 98 The cities of Davao and Metro Manila probably have the most Japanese influence in the country 99 100 The popular dining spots for Japanese nationals are located in Makati which is called as Little Tokyo a small area filled with restaurants specializing in different types of Japanese food Some of the best Japanese no frills restaurants in the Philippines can be found in Makati s Little Tokyo area 101 In the Philippines Halo halo is derived from Japanese Kakigori Halo halo is believed to be an indigenized version of the Japanese kakigori class of desserts originating from pre war Japanese migrants into the islands The earliest versions were composed only of cooked red beans or mung beans in crushed ice with sugar and milk a dessert known locally as mongo ya Over the years more native ingredients were added resulting in the development of the modern halo halo 102 103 Some authors specifically attribute it to the 1920s or 1930s Japanese migrants in the Quinta Market of Quiapo Manila due to its proximity to the now defunct Insular Ice Plant which was the source of the city s ice supply 104 In Cebu City the Little Kyoto district let s you experience the feel of being in Kyoto Japan with a statue of the reclining Buddha overlooking the city The Little Kyoto district also features Japanese food stalls serving various Japanese dishes like Takoyaki Tempura and various other Japanese cuisine that is enjoyed by the people of Cebu City Philippines 105 106 Odong also called pancit odong is a Visayan noodle soup made with odong noodles canned smoked sardines tinapa in tomato sauce bottle gourd upo loofah patola chayote ginger garlic red onions and various other vegetables It is garnished and spiced with black pepper scallions toasted garlic calamansi or labuyo chilis 107 108 109 110 The dish is usually prepared as a soup but it can also be cooked with minimal water in which case it is known as odong guisado 111 It is a common simple and cheap meal in Mindanao particularly the Davao Region and the Visayas Islands 112 111 113 It is almost always eaten with white rice rarely on its own 111 It is named after the round flour noodles called odong which are closest in texture and taste to the Okinawa soba These noodles are characteristically sold dried into straight sticks around 6 to 8 in 15 to 20 cm long 113 The name is derived from the Japanese udon noodles although it does not use udon noodles or bear any resemblance to udon dishes It originates from the Davao Region of Mindanao 114 which had a large Japanese migrant community in the early 1900s 115 The odong noodles were previously locally manufactured by Okinawans but modern odong noodles which are distinctly yellowish are imported from China 114 Because odong noodles are difficult to find in other regions they can be substituted with other types of noodles including misua miki egg noodles udon and even instant noodles 109 111 Taiwan Edit Japan and Taiwan have shared close historical and cultural relations Dishes such as sushi ramen and donburi are very popular among locals Japanese chain restaurants such as Coco Ichibanya Ippudo Kura Sushi Marugame Seimen Mister Donut MOS Burger Ootoya Ramen Kagetsu Arashi Saizeriya Sukiya Sushiro Tonkatsu Shinjuku Saboten Yayoi Ken and Yoshinoya can all be found in Taiwan among others Taiwan has adapted many Japanese food items Tianbula Taiwanese tempura is actually satsuma age and was introduced to Taiwan during Japanese rule by people from Kyushu where the word tempura is commonly used to refer to satsuma age 116 117 118 It is popular as a night market snack and as an ingredient for oden hot pot and lu wei Taiwanese versions of oden are sold locally as olen or more recently as guandongzhu from Japanese Kantō ni in convenience stores Thailand Edit In Southeast Asia Thailand is the largest market for Japanese food This is partly because Thailand is a popular tourist destination having large numbers of Japanese expatriates as well as the local population having developed a taste for authentic Japanese cuisine According to the Organisation that Promote Japanese Restaurants Abroad JRO the number of Japanese restaurants in Thailand jumped about 2 2 fold from 2007 s figures to 1 676 in June 2012 In Bangkok Japanese restaurants accounts for 8 3 percent of all restaurants following those that serve Thai 119 Numbers of Japanese chain restaurants has established their business in Thailand such as Yoshinoya gyudon restaurant chain Gyu Kaku yakiniku restaurant chain and Kourakuen ramen restaurant chain United Kingdom Edit A branch of Kokoro in Sutton High Street Sutton Greater London Japanese food Inspired restaurant chains in the UK include Wagamama YO Sushi Nudo Sushi Box Wasabi Bone Daddies and Kokoro often localising the food and mixing in other ingredients originating from Southeast Asia and India United States Edit The California roll has been influential in sushi s global popularity its invention often credited to a Japanese born chef working in Los Angeles with dates assigned to 1973 or even 1964 120 121 The dish has been snubbed by some purist sushi chefs 120 and also likened to the America born chop suey by one scholar 121 As of 2015 update the country has about 4 200 sushi restaurants 122 It is one of the most popular styles of sushi in the US market Japanese cuisine is an integral part of food culture in Hawaii as well as in other parts of the United States Popular items are sushi sashimi and teriyaki Kamaboko known locally as fish cake is a staple of saimin a noodle soup that is a local favorite in Hawaii 123 Sushi long regarded as quite exotic in the west until the 1970s has become a popular health food in parts of North America Western Europe and Asia Two of the first Japanese restaurants in the United States were Saito and Nippon Restaurants such as these popularized dishes such as sukiyaki and tempura while Nippon was the first restaurant in Manhattan to have a dedicated sushi bar 124 Nippon was also one of the first Japanese restaurants in the U S to grow and process their own soba 125 and responsible for creation of the now standard beef negimayaki dish 126 In the U S the teppanyaki iron hot plate cooking restaurant took foothold Such restaurants featured steak shrimp and vegetables including bean sprouts cooked in front of the customer on a teppanyaki grill teppan by a personal chef who turns cooking into performance art twirling and juggling cutting knives like batons The meal would be served with steamed rice and Japanese soup This style of cooking was made popular in the U S when Rocky Aoki founded his popular restaurant chain Benihana in 1964 127 128 In Japan this type of cooking is thought to be American food but in the U S it is thought to be Japanese Aoki thought this would go over better in the U S than traditional Japanese cuisine because he felt that Americans enjoyed eating in exotic surroundings but are deeply mistrustful of exotic foods 129 Cultural heritage EditIn February 2012 the Agency for Cultural Affairs recommended that Washoku Traditional Dietary Cultures of the Japanese be added to the UNESCO Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity 130 On December 4 2013 Washoku traditional dietary cultures sic of the Japanese notably for the celebration of New Year was added to UNESCO s Intangible Cultural Heritage bringing the number of Japanese assets listed on UNESCO s Intangible Cultural Heritage list to 22 131 132 Food controversies Edit Whale meat sashimi one of the most controversial Japanese dishes Some elements of Japanese cuisine involving eating live seafood such as Ikizukuri and Odori ebi have received criticism overseas as a form of animal cruelty 133 Japanese cuisine is heavily dependent on seafood products About 45 kilograms of seafood are consumed per capita annually in Japan more than most other developed countries 134 An aspect of environmental concern is Japanese appetite for seafood which could contribute to the depletion of natural ocean resources For example Japan consumes 80 of the global supply of blue fin tuna a popularly sought sushi and sashimi ingredient which could lead to its extinction due to commercial overfishing 135 Another environmental concern is commercial whaling and the consumption of whale meat for which Japan is the world s largest market 136 137 See also Edit Japan portal Food portalBento Culture of Japan Cuisine of Okinawa Fake food in Japan Honzen ryōri Japanese New Year Kaiseki List of Japanese condiments List of Japanese cooking utensils List of Japanese dishes List of Japanese desserts and sweets List of Japanese soups and stews List of Japanese ingredients List of Japanese restaurants List of sushi restaurantsReferences Edit Lucero Mario J March 4 2022 Mixing Food Cultures Japan Mexico and Southwest US Tokyo Weekender Retrieved April 29 2022 Demetriou Danielle October 19 2011 Japan relishes status as country with most three starred Michelin restaurants The Daily Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on January 11 2022 Retrieved January 15 2019 Japanese cuisine added to Unesco intangible heritage list BBC News December 5 2013 Kappō かっ ぽう 割烹 Kojien 4th ed 1991 Tada Tetsunosuke in Japanese 1994 Kappo 割烹 かつぽう Nihon Dai hyakka zensho Vol 5 Shogakukan p 436 ISBN 9784095260013 Burum Linda 1992 Koryori ya Kappo and Robata Restaurants Little Dishes with More Style A Guide to Ethnic Food in Los Angeles Harper Perennial p 43 ISBN 9780062730381 What is Japanese Kappo cuisine Michelin December 19 2017 Retrieved January 15 2020 Kaiseki 5 かい せき 懐石 Kojien 4th ed 1991 Assmann Stephanie Rath Eric C 2010 Koryori ya Kappo and Robata Restaurants Little Dishes with More Style A Guide to Ethnic Food in Los Angeles University of Illinois Press p 4 ISBN 9780252077524 Honzenryōri ほんぜん りょうり 本膳料理 Kojien 4th ed 1991 Kaiseki 1 かい せき 会席 かいせき りょうり 会席料理 Kojien 4th ed 1991 a b Yomiuri Shimbun Osaka 2005 2001 Zatsugaku shimbun 雑学新聞 PHP Kenkyusho ISBN 978 4 569 64432 5 p 158 Kobayashi T Taste of Simplicity Japanese One Soup One Dish Cuisine WAWAZA Retrieved July 10 2021 Kondo Tamami 近藤珠實 2010 日本の作法としきたり 四季の行事と冠婚葬祭 その由来と常識 Nihon no saho to shikitari shiki no gyoji to kankon sosai sono yurai to joshiki preview PHP研究所 ISBN 978 4 569 77764 1 p 185 Taishushokudō たいしゅう しょくどう 大衆食堂 Kojien 4th ed 1991 a b c d Kenkyusha s New Japanese English Dictionary ISBN 4 7674 2015 6 Ishikawa Hiroyoshi in Japanese 1991 Taishu bunka jiten Kōbundō p 516 ISBN 9784335550461 Rath E C 2013 Reevaluating Rikyu Kaisekiand the Origins of Japanese Cuisine The Journal of Japanese Studies 39 1 67 96 doi 10 1353 jjs 2013 0022 Stevens C S 2011 Touch Encounters with Japanese Popular Culture Japanese Studies 31 1 1 10 doi 10 1080 10371397 2011 559898 Bestor T C 2015 Cuisine and identity in contemporary Japan Routledge Handbook of Japanese Culture and Society doi 10 4324 9780203818459 ch22 a b Ashkenazi M 2013 The Essence of Japanese Cuisine The History and Culture of Japanese Food doi 10 4324 9781315027487 Jung S 2019 The Japanese Culinary Academy teaches you the fundamentals of food from the Land of the Rising Sun Avey T 2012 Discover the History of Sushi a b c Allen Kristi March 26 2019 Why Eating Meat Was Banned in Japan for Centuries Atlas Obscura a b c d Motoyama Tekishu in Japanese 1969 1968 Nihon ryōri 日本料理 Sekai hyakka jiten 世界百科事典 Vol 17 Heibonsha pp 355 356 A Day in the Life Seasonal Foods Archived January 16 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Japan Forum Newsletter No September 14 1999 Itoh Makiko April 26 2013 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Conservation 164 ISSN 1171 9834 Archived PDF from the original on December 6 2013 Hepburn James Curtis 1888 A Japanese English and English Japanese Dictionary 4 ed Tokyo Z P Maruya amp Company Kiple Kenneth F Ornelas Kriemhild 2000 The Cambridge World History of Food Vol 2 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 40216 6 Archived from the original on May 4 2012 Shimbo Hiroko 2000 The Japanese Kitchen 250 Recipes in a Traditional Spirit Harvard Common Press ISBN 978 1 55832 177 9 Tsuji Shizuo Fisher M F K Reichl Ruth 2006 Japanese Cooking A Simple Art Kodansha International ISBN 978 4 7700 3049 8Further reading EditCwiertka Katarzyna Joanna 2006 Modern Japanese Cuisine Food Power And National Identity Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1 86189 298 0 Francks Penelope Diet and the comparison of living standards across the Great Divergence Japanese food history in an English mirror Journal of Global History 14 1 2019 3 21 Rath Eric C 2010 Food and Fantasy in Early Modern Japan University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 26227 0External links Edit Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe module on Cuisine of Japan Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cuisine of Japan Wikivoyage has travel information for Japanese cuisine Japanese cuisine at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese cuisine amp oldid 1144708022, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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