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Japanese cuisine

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Popular Japanese teishoku meal, includes tempura, sashimi and miso shiru.

Japanese cuisine is the foodingredients, preparation and way of eatingof Japan. The traditional food of Japan is based on rice with miso soup and other dishes, with an emphasis on seasonal ingredients. The side dishes often consist of fish, pickled vegetables, and vegetables cooked in broth. Fish is common in the traditional cuisine. It is often grilled, but it may also be served raw as sashimi or in sushi. Seafood and vegetables are also deep-fried in a light batter as tempura.

Apart from rice, staples include noodles, such as soba and udon. Japan has many simmered dishes such as fish products in broth called oden, or beef in sukiyaki and nikujaga. Foreign food, in particular Chinese food in the form of noodles in soup called ramen and fried dumplings, gyoza, and western food such as curry and hamburger steaks are commonly found in Japan. Historically, the Japanese shunned meat, but with the modernization of Japan in the 1860s, meat-based dishes such as tonkatsu became common.

Japan has an indigenous form of sweets called wagashi, which include ingredients such as red bean paste, as well as its indigenous rice wine sake.

Japanese cuisine, particularly sushi, has now become popular throughout the world.

Overview of traditional Japanese cuisine

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

Japanese cuisine is based on combining the staple food which is steamed white rice or gohan (?) with one or several okazu or main dishes and side dishes. This may be accompanied by a clear or miso soup and tsukemono (pickles).

The phrase ichij-sansai ( "one soup, three sides"?) refers to the makeup of a typical meal served, but has roots in classic kaiseki, honzen, and ysoku cuisine. The term is also used to describe the first course served in standard kaiseki cuisine nowadays.[1]

Rice is served in its own small bowl (chawan), and each course item is placed on its own small plate (sara) or bowl (hachi) for each individual portion. This is done even at home. It contrasts with the Western-style dinners at home, where each individual takes helpings from the large serving dishes of food presented at 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 leaves, etc. This is why in take-out sushi the tamagoyaki egg and fish, or Blue-backed fish and white-fleshed fish are carefully separated. Placing okazu on top of rice and "soiling" it is also frowned upon by old-fashioned etiquette.[2] This is in sharp contrast to Chinese cuisine, where placing food on rice is standard.

The small rice bowl or chawan (lit. "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.

Kaiseki appetizers on a legged tray

In the olden days, among the nobility, each course of a full-course Japanese meal would be brought on serving trays 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 classier though dated synonym to the more familiar teishoku (?), since the latter basically is a term for a combo meal served at a taish-shokud, akin to a diner.[3]Teishoku means a meal of fixed menu, a dinner à prix fixe[4] served at shokud ( "dining hall"?) or ryriten ( "restaurant"?), which is somewhat vague (shokud can mean a diner type restaurant or a corporate lunch hall); but e.g. Ishikawa, Hiroyoshi () (1991). Taish bunka jiten (snippet). Kbund. p. 516.  defines it as fare served at teishoku-shokud ( "teishoku dining hall"?), etc., a diner-like establishment.

Emphasis is placed on seasonality of food or shun (?),[5][6] and dishes are designed to herald the arrival of the four seasons or calendar months.

Seasonality

Much like the haiku poem, traditional Japanese cuisine strives to present seasonality (shun).[original research?]

Seasonality means taking advantage of the "fruit of the mountains" ( yama no sachi?, alt. "bounty of the mountains") (e.g. bamboo shoots in spring, chestnuts in the fall) as well as the "fruit of the sea" ( umi no sachi?, alt. "bounty of the sea") as they come into season. Thus the first catch of skipjack tunas ( hatsu-gatsuo?) that arrives with the Kuroshio Current has traditionally been greatly prized.[citation needed]

If something becomes available rather earlier than usual, the first crop or early catch is called hashiri.[7]

Use of (inedible) tree leaves and branches as decor is also characteristic of Japanese cuisine. Maple leaves are often floated on water to exude coolness or ry (?), 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.[citation needed]

Traditional ingredients

Further 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.[8] 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

Yakiniku

As Japan is an island nation surrounded by an ocean, its people have always taken advantage of the abundant seafood supply.[9] 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.[10] The eating of "four-legged creatures" ( yotsuashi?) was spoken of as taboo,[11] unclean, and/or something to be avoided by personal choice through the Edo Period.[12] Notably, 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 gameas opposed to domesticated livestockwas tolerated; in particular, trapped hare was counted using the measure word wa (?), a term normally reserved for birds.

Vegetable consumption has dwindled while processed foods have become more prominent in Japanese households due to the rising costs of general foodstuffs.[13]Nonetheless, Kyoto vegetables, or Kyoyasai, are rising in popularity and the different varieties of Kyoto vegetables are being revived [14]

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-ryri (?)) and Chinese cuisine,[15] and became commonplace with the availability of cooking oil due to increased productivity.[15] Dishes such as tempura, aburaage, satsumaage[15] are now part of established traditional Japanese cuisine. Words such as tempura or hiryzu (synonymous with ganmodoki) are said to be of Portuguese origin.

Also, certain homey or rustic sorts of traditional Japanese foods such as kinpira, hijiki, and kiriboshi daikon usually involves stir-frying in oil before stewing in soy sauce. Some standard oszai or obanzai(ja) 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
See also Japanese seasonings

Traditional Japanese food is typically seasoned with a combination of dashi, soy sauce, sake and mirin, vinegar, sugar, and salt. These are typically the only seasonings used when grilling or braising an item. 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 and takanotsume (?) red pepper.[citation needed] This contrasts conceptually with barbecue or stew, where a blend of seasonings is used before and during cooking.[original research?]

Once a main dish has been cooked, spices such as minced ginger and various pungent herbs added as a garnish, called tsuma.[citation needed] With certain milder items, a dollop of wasabi and grated daikon (daikon-oroshi), or Japanese mustard are provided as condiment.[citation needed] A sprig of mitsuba, a piece of yuzu rind floated on soups are called ukimi.[citation needed] Minced shiso leaves and myoga often serve as yakumi, a type of condiment paired with tataki of katsuo or soba.[citation needed] Finally, a dish may be garnished with minced seaweed in the form of crumpled nori or flakes of aonori.[citation needed]

Dishes

Further information: okazu (or szai (?)); List of okazu

In the aforementioned stock phrase ichij-sansai ( "one soup, three sides"?), the word sai (?) has the basic meaning of "vegetable", but secondarily means any accompanying dish[16] including fish or meat. It figures in the Japanese word for appetizer, zensai (?); main dish, shusai (?); or szai (?) (formal synonym for okazu - considered somewhat of a housewife's term[17]).

Salads

Japanese vegetable salads often add seafood

The o-hitashi or hitashi-mono ( [4]?) is boiled green-leaf vegetables bunched and cut to size, steeped in dashi broth,[18][19] eaten with dashes of soy sauce. Another item is sunomono ( lit "vinegar item"?), which could be made with wakame seaweed,[20] or be something like a khaku namasu ( "red white namasu"?)[21] made from thin toothpick slices of daikon and carrot. The so-called vinegar that is blended with the ingredient here is often sanbaizu(ja) ( "three cupful/spoonful vinegar"?)[20] which is a blend of vinegar, mirin, and soy sauce. A tosazu(ja) ( "Tosa vinegar"?) adds katsuo dashi to this. Note sparing use of oil, compared with Western salads.

An aemono(ja) (?) 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 (?)[22] where usually vegetables such as green beens are tossed with white or black sesame seeds ground in a suribachi mortar bowl, flavored additionally with sugar and soy sauce. Shira-ae (?) adds tofu (bean curd) in the mix.[22] An aemono is tossed with vinegar-white miso mix and uses wakegi[22]scallion and baka-gai ( or a trough shell (Mactra sinensis?) 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.

List of dishes

Main article: List of Japanese dishes
Tempura battered and deep fried seafood and vegetables
Yakitori grilled chicken

Below are listed some of the most common:

  • grilled and pan-fried dishes (yakimono ),
  • stewed/simmered/cooked/boiled dishes (nimono ),
  • stir-fried dishes (itamemono ),
  • steamed dishes (mushimono ),
  • deep-fried dishes (agemono ),
  • sliced raw fish (sashimi ),
  • soups (suimono and shirumono ),
  • pickled/salted vegetables (tsukemono ),
  • dishes dressed with various kinds of sauce (aemono ),
  • vinegared dishes (su-no-mono ),
  • delicacies, food of delicate flavor (chinmi ).[23]

Classification

Kaiseki

Japanese Kaiseki ryori

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 ichij-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 (?). Sometimes another element called shiizakana (?) is served to complement the sake, for guests who are heavier drinkers.

The tea ceremony kaiseki is often confounded with another kaiseki-ryri (?), which is an outgrowth of meals served at a gathering for haiku and renga composition, which turned into a term for sumptuous sake-accompanied banquet, or shuen (?).[1]

Vegetarian

Natto, 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 shjin-ryri (), vegetarian dishes developed by Buddhist monks. However, the advertised shjin-ryri at public eating places includes some non-vegetarian elements.

In regards to vegetarianism, it is worth mentioning fucha-ryri(ja) (?), introduced from China by the baku sect (a sub-sect of Zen Buddhism), and which some sources still regard as part of "Japanese cuisine".[5] 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. An interesting aspect of the fucha-ryri practiced at the temple is the wealth of modoki-ryri ( "mock foods"?), one example being mock-eel, made from strained tofu, with nori seaweed used expertly to mimic the black skin.[24] The secret ingredient used is grated gobo (burdock) roots.[25][26]

Dr. Masakazu Tada, Honorary Vice-President of the International Vegetarian Union for 25 years from 1960, stated that "Japan was vegetarian for a 1,000 years". Although this is not totally true, British journalist J. W. Robertson Scott reported in the 1920s that the society was 90% vegetarian. 5060% of the population only ate fish on festive occasions, probably more because of poverty than for any other reason.

Rice

Main article: Japanese rice

Rice has been the staple food for the Japanese historically. Its fundamental importance is evident from the fact that the word for cooked rice, gohan and meshi, also stands for a "meal".[27] While rice has a long history of cultivation in Japan, its use as a staple has not been universal. Notably, in northern areas (northern Honsh and Hokkaid), other grain 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.[28]

Donburi rice bowl

Japanese rice is short grain and becomes sticky when cooked. Most rice is sold as hakumai ("white rice"), with the outer portion of the grains (nuka) polished away. Unpolished brown rice (genmai) is considered less desirable, but its popularity has been increasing in recent years.[28]

Noodles

Main 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.

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.

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.

Sweets

Main article: Wagashi
See also: List of Japanese desserts and 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. Kakigori is a shaved ice dessert flavored with syrup or condensed milk. It is usually sold and eaten at summer festivals. A dessert very popular among the children in Japan are dorayaki. They are sweet pancakes filled with a sweet bean paste. They are mostly eaten at room temperature but are very delicious hot.

See also the list of sweets.

Beverages

Main article: List of Japanese dishes § Tea and other drinks

Tea

Green tea is produced in Japan and prepared in various forms such as matcha, the tea used in the Japanese tea ceremony.[29]

Beer

Main article: Beer in Japan

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 "Happoushu" (, literally, "bubbly alcohol") or non-malt Happousei (, literally "a type of bubbly alcohol") have captured a large part of the market as tax is substantially lower on these products.

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.

Saké

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") saké, which bear little resemblance to the sakés of even 100 years ago. Side dishes for saké are particularly called sakana or otsumami.

Saké is brewed in a highly labor-intensive process more similar to beer production than winemaking, hence, the common description of saké as rice "wine" is misleading. Saké 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,[30] which produce thousands of different sakés. Saké characteristics and flavor profiles vary with regionality, ingredients, and the styles (maintained by brewmaster guilds) that brewery leaders want to produce.

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

Shch

Shch is a distilled spirit that is typically made from barley, sweet potato, buckwheat, or rice. Shch is produced everywhere in Japan, but its production started in Kyushu.[31]

Whisky

Main article: Japanese whisky

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

Regional cuisine

Main article: Japanese regional cuisine

Japanese cuisine offers a vast array of regional specialties known as kydo-ryri (), many of them originating from dishes prepared using traditional recipes with local ingredients. Foods from the Kanto 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 made with light soy sauce.[32]

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, ) or flat floor trays were set before each diner. Larger low tables (chabudai, ) 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.

Traditional Japanese table setting is to place a bowl of rice on your left and to place a bowl of miso soup on your 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.[32]

Dining etiquette

Tables and sitting

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 still 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.[citation needed]

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.[citation needed]

When dining out in a restaurant, the host will guide you to your seat and it is polite to wait to be seated. 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 an alcove or tokonoma in the room, the guest is seated in front of it. The host sits next to or closest to the entrance.[citation needed]

Itadakimasu and Gochisosama

In Japan, it is customary to say itadakimasu (lit. "I [humbly] receive") before starting to eat a meal.[citation needed] 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] Remember also to wait for the honored or eldest guest at the table to start eating before you do.[citation needed] Another customary and important etiquette is to say go-chis-sama deshita (lit. "It was a feast") to the host after the meal and the restaurant staff when leaving.[citation needed]

Hot towels

Before eating, most dining places will provide either a hot or cold towel or a plastic-wrapped wet napkin (o-shibori). This is for cleaning hands before eating (and not after). It is rude to use them to wash the face or any part of the body other than the hands though some Japanese men use their o-shibori to wipe their faces in less formal places. Accept o-shibori with both hands when a server hands you the towel. When finished, fold or roll up your oshibori and place it on the table. It is impolite to use o-shibori towels to wipe any spills on the table.

Bowls

The rice or the soup is eaten by picking up the bowl with the left hand and using chopsticks (hashi) with the right, or vice versa if you are left-handed. Traditionally, chopsticks were held in the right hand and the bowl in the left in fact, Japanese children were taught to distinguish left from right as "the right hand holds the chopsticks, the left hand holds the bowl" but left-handed eating is acceptable today. Bowls may be lifted to the mouth, but should not be touched by the mouth except when drinking soup. The Japanese customarily slurp noodle soup dishes like ramen, udon, and soba. When slurping noodles quickly, the soup clings to the noodles, making the dish more flavourful.[citation needed]

Soy sauce

Soy sauce (shyu) is not usually poured over most foods at the table; a dipping dish is usually provided. Soy sauce is, however, meant to be poured directly onto tfu and grated daikon dishes, and in the raw egg when preparing tamago-kake-gohan ("egg on rice"). In particular, soy sauce should never be poured onto rice or into soup.

Chopsticks

The proper usage of chopsticks (hashi) is the most important table etiquette in Japan. Chopsticks are never left sticking vertically into rice, as this resembles incense sticks (which are usually placed vertically in sand) during offerings to the dead. This may easily offend some Japanese people. Using chopsticks to spear food or to point is also frowned upon and it is considered very bad manners to bite chopsticks. Other important chopsticks rules to remember include the following:[citation needed]

  • Hold your chopsticks towards their end, and not in the middle or the front third.
  • When you are not using your chopsticks and when you are finished eating, lay them down in front of you with the tip to left.
  • Do not pass food with your chopsticks directly to somebody else's chopsticks. Only at funerals are the bones of the cremated body given in that way from person to person.
  • Do not move your chopsticks around in the air too much, nor play with them.
  • Do not move around plates or bowls with chopsticks.
  • To separate a piece of food into two pieces, exert controlled pressure on the chopsticks while moving them apart from each other.

Communal dish

When taking food from a communal dish, unless they are family or very close friends, one should turn the chopsticks around to grab the food; it is considered more sanitary. Alternatively, one could have a separate set of chopsticks for communal dishes.

Sharing

If sharing food with someone else, move it directly from one plate to another. Never pass food from one pair of chopsticks to another, as this recalls passing bones during a funeral.

Eat what is given

It is customary to eat rice to the last grain. Being a picky eater is frowned on, and it is not customary to ask for special requests or substitutions at restaurants. It is considered ungrateful to make these requests especially in circumstances where you are being hosted, as in a business dinner environment. After eating, try to move all your dishes back to the same position they were at the start of the meal. This includes replacing the lids on dishes and putting your chopsticks on the chopstick holder or back into their paper slip.[citation needed] Good manners dictate that you respect the selections of the host. However this can be set aside if you have allergies or religious needs such as a peanut allergy, or a religious prohibition against certain foods like pork.

Drinking

Even in informal situations, drinking alcohol starts with a toast (kanpai, ) when everyone is ready. Do not start drinking until everybody is served and has finished the toast. It is not customary to pour oneself a drink; rather, people are expected to keep each other's drinks topped up. When someone moves to pour your drink you should hold your glass with both hands and thank them.

Dishes for special occasions

Osechi, new year special dishes in three-tiered box

In 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 the term Hagi/Ohagi is used in autumn.
  • Chimaki (steamed sweet rice cake): Tango no Sekku and Gion Festival.
  • Hamo (a type of fish, often eel)[33] and somen: Gion Festival.
  • Osechi: New Year.
  • Sekihan, literally "red rice", 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.[34]
  • Soba:[35] New Year's Eve. This is called toshi koshi soba (ja:) (literally "year crossing soba").
  • Chirashizushi, Ushiojiru (clear soup of clams) and amazake: Hinamatsuri.

In some regions every 1st and 15th day of the month people eat a mixture of rice and azuki (azuki meshi (), see Sekihan).

Imported and adapted foods

Japan has incorporated imported food from across the world (mostly from Asia, Europe and to a lesser extent the Americas), and have historically adapted many to make them their own.

  • Foods imported from Portugal in the 16th century
  • Other adapted cuisines in Japan

Yshoku - Foreign (Western) food, dishes[4]

Main article: Yshoku

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 yshoku (), a shortened form of seiyshoku () lit. Western cuisine, opening up in cities. Restaurants that serve these foods are called yshokuya (), lit. Western cuisine restaurants.

Many yshoku 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 yshoku as opposed to the more traditional washoku (), lit. Japanese cuisine.

Okonomiyaki

Main article: okonomiyaki
Japanese pancake, Okonomiyaki

Okonomiyaki is a savoury pancake containing a variety of ingredients.

Tonkatsu

Tonkatsu pork cutlet
Main article: tonkatsu

Tonkatsu is a breaded, deep-fried pork cutlet.

Curry

Main article: Japanese curry

Curry was introduced to Japan by the British in the Meiji era. Japanese curry is unlike Indian or any other forms of curry. Japanese versions of curry can be found in foods such as curry udon, curry bread, and "katsu-curry", tonkatsu served with curry. They sometimes come with rice beside the curry on the dish. This can be eaten during dinner most of the time.

Ramen

Ramen noodles

Chinese-style wheat noodles served in a meat stock broth known as ramen have become extremely popular over the last century.[citation needed]

Chinese food is the most popular foreign cuisine throughout Japan. It is closely followed by yakiniku and Italian pasta.[36]

Waf burgers

Hamburger chains 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 rice burger, fried shrimp burgers, and green tea milkshakes.

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).[citation needed]

Japanese food outside 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.[citation needed] 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 are Hong Kong, Taiwan, China, Singapore, Thailand and Indonesia.[37] 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.

United Kingdom

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

Japanese food restaurant chains in the UK include Wagamama, YO! Sushi and Kokoro.

Korea

Kamaboko is popular street food in South Korea, where it is known as eomuk () or odeng (). It is usually boiled on a skewer in broth and sold from street restaurant carts where they can be eaten with alcoholic beverage, especially soju. In the winter, deep-fried eomuk-on-a-stick (known alternatively as "hot-bar") is sold.[citation needed]

China

Ramen, of Chinese origin, has been exported back to China in recent years where it is known as ri shi la mian (, "Japanese lamian").[citation needed] Japanese ramen chains serve ramen alongside distinctly Japanese dishes such as tempura and yakitori.[citation needed] Skewered versions of oden is a common convenience store item in Shanghai where it is known as aódin ().

Taiwan

Taiwan has adapted many Japanese food items. A Taiwanese version of tempura, only barely resembling the original, is known as or (tianbula).[citation needed] Taiwanese versions of oden is known locally as oren () or Kwantung stew.[citation needed]

Indonesia

Chicken teriyaki-salmon sashimi set bento, served in a Japanese restaurant in Jakarta. Lately Japanese cuisine enjoys popularity in Indonesia.

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 Indonesians middle-class expecting higher quality foods.[37] 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.

In some cases, Japanese cuisine in Indonesia often slanted to suit Indonesian taste. Hoka Hoka Bento in particular is Indonesian-owned Japanese fastfood restaurant chain that cater to Indonesian clientele. As the result the foods served there have been adapted to suit Indonesians' taste. Examples of the change include stronger flavour compared to authentic subtle Japanese taste, the preference for fried food, as well as the addition of sambal to cater to Indonesians' preference for hot and spicy food. Japanese food popularity also had penetrated street food culture, as modest Warjep or Warung Jepang (Japanese food stall) offer Japanese food such as tempura and takoyaki, at very moderately low prices. 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. 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.[38] Nevertheless some of these Japanese eating establishments might strive to serve the authenthic Japanese cuisine abroad.[39]

Philippines

In the Philippines, Japanese cuisine has always been popular with Filipino people and Filipino people have always been huge fans of Japanese cuisine.[40] The Philippines have very big influences from the Japanese people, Indian culture, and Chinese influences.[41] The cities of Davao and Metro Manila have especially have probably the most Japanese influence in the country.[42] In Metro Manila, it is not surprising to see Japanese-Filipino fusion cuisine from things like Manila Maki and the Laguna Roll. Several Japanese restaurants have been put up in Manila and other parts of the country, with Filipinos gauging the authenticity of the place based on the number of its Japanese customers, and Filipinos who are not that fussy, meanwhile, are happy with Japanese fast food chains with eat-all-you-can rice and fusion restaurants.[43] The most popular dining spots for Japanese nationals are located in Makati City, where you can find Little Tokyo, a small area filled with restaurants specializing in different types of Japanese food. Some of the best Japanese restaurants in the Philippines are no-frills affairs are found in Little Tokyo. Zen gardens, red lanterns and Japanese signs almost give the impression that you're in Japan. Restaurants here are generally owned by Japanese people who have moved to the country to start families with Philippine wives.[44]

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 Toronto and Vancouver, but 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 gained a surge of popularity.

United States

United States-developed popular makizushi California roll has been influential in sushi's global popularity.[45] 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. 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.

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. A popular sushi topping, "Tampico", is made by blending chiles, mayonnaise, and imitation crab. Cream cheese and avocado is usually added to makizushi.[citation needed]

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[46] 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.[citation needed]

Australia

In Australia, there are one or two sushi bars in most shopping centers.[citation needed]

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.[47] On December 4, 2013, "Washoku, traditional dietary cultures of the Japanese, notably for the celebration of New Year" was added to UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage, bringing Japanese assets listed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list to 22.[48][49]

See also

Portal iconJapan portal
Portal iconFood portal
  • Bento
  • Culture of Japan
  • Cuisine of Okinawa
  • Fake food in Japan
  • Honzen-ryri
  • 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

References

  1. ^ a b (2005). . PHP. ISBN 978-4-569-64432-5. , p.158, explains that in the tea kaiseki, the
  2. ^ Kondo, Tamami() (2010). : (Nihon no saho to shikitari: shiki no gyoji to kankon sosai, sono yurai to joshiki) (preview). PHP. ISBN 978-4-569-77764-1. , p.185
  3. ^ Shinmura 1976
  4. ^ a b c Kenkyusha's New Japanese-English Dictionary, ISBN 4-7674-2015-6
  5. ^ a b Heibonsha 1969
  6. ^ "A Day in the Life: Seasonal Foods", The Japan Forum Newsletter No.September 14, 1999.
  7. ^ Hepburn 1988 dictionary "hashiri: The first fruits, or first caught fish of the season"
  8. ^ Ehara, Ayako (1999). "School Meals and Japan's Changing Diet" (snippet). Japan echo (Japan Echo Inc.) 26. , quote: "Relatively alien to the traditional Japanese diet were meat, oil and fats, and dairy products.."
  9. ^ Heibonsha 1964, vol. 17, p.355, "Nihon ryori", section by Toshio Yanagihara(ja)
  10. ^ Heibonsha 1964, vol. 17, p.356, "Nihon ryori", section by Motoyama: ".."
  11. ^ Cawthorin 1997, p.7
  12. ^ Morimatsu, Yoshiaki (); , (1957). "". .  ","
  13. ^ Pulvers, Roger (March 6, 2011). "Japanese families' nutritional values pay dearly for 'progress'". The Japan Times. Retrieved March 22, 2011. 
  14. ^ Ochiai, H. (2014, November 25). Is it a potato or a prawn?: Kyoto farmers make a name selling strangely shaped vegetables, The Japan News by the Yomiuri Shimbun, the-japan-news.com/news/article/0001713547
  15. ^ a b c Fukuta, Ajio () (1999). Nihon minzoku daijiten() 1. Yoshikawa Kobunkan (). , p.16 ,,,
  16. ^ Shinmura 1976 Kjien
  17. ^ Shinmura 1976 Kjien under okazu says "formerly a ladies' term ()"
  18. ^ Andoh 2012, p.20 "spinach steeped in broth"; p.63 "(spinach) blanched and then marinated" in smoky broth.
  19. ^ Shimbo 2000, p.237, "Ohitashi literally means 'dipped item,' although the dressing is actually poured over the leaf vegetables.
  20. ^ a b Shimbo 2000, p.147 "wakame and cucumber in sanbaizu dressing (sunomono)"; p.74 "sanbaizu" recipe
  21. ^ Tsuji, Fisher & Richil 2006,p.429
  22. ^ a b c Tsuji, Fisher & Richil 2006,p.241-253
  23. ^ Kenkyusha's New Japanese-English Dictionary, ISBN 4-7674-2015-6
  24. ^ "". . Asahi Shimbun. September 3, 2011. Retrieved May 2012. 
  25. ^ Nagatomo, Akiko () (September 3, 2011). "". ×. Industry and Tourism Bureau, City of Kyoto. Retrieved May 2012. 
  26. ^ Andoh 2010, p.188- gives a recipe.
  27. ^ Kiple & Ornelas 2001, p. 1176
  28. ^ a b Kobayashi, Kazuhiko; Smil, Vaclav (2012). Japan's Dietary Transition and Its Impacts. MA, USA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. p. 18. ISBN 9780262017824. 
  29. ^ Hosking, Richard (1995). A Dictionary of Japanese Food - Ingredients and Culture. Tuttle. p. 30. ISBN 0-8048-2042-2. 
  30. ^ http://sake-world.com/html/sake-faqs.html
  31. ^ "What is Shochu?". Retrieved December 31, 2006. 
  32. ^ a b Introduction to Japanese Food, retrieved January 8, 2010
  33. ^ Davidson, Alan (2003). Seafood of South-East Asia: a comprehensive guide with recipes. Ten Speed Press. p. 34. ISBN 1-58008-452-4. 
  34. ^ Tsuji, Shizuo; M.F.K. Fisher (2007). Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art (25 ed.). Kodansha International. pp. 280281. ISBN 978-4-770-03049-8. 
  35. ^ Mente, Boye Lafayette De (2007). Dining Guide to Japan: Find the Right Restaurant, Order the Right Dish, and. Tuttle Publishing. p. 70. ISBN 4-8053-0875-3. 
  36. ^ Off the Menu - Chinese Food in Japan and about Yokohama's Chinatown
  37. ^ a b Azi Fitriyanti (January 25, 2014). "Japanese Cuisine in Indonesia Focuses on Taste, Menus Food Safety". Antara News. Retrieved May 5, 2014. 
  38. ^ "New: Suntiang, When Padang Marries Japanese Food". Culinary Bonanza. February 6,. Retrieved May 5, 2014.  Check date values in: |date= (help)
  39. ^ I. Christianto (November 30, 2009). "Enjoying internationally popular Japanese food". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved May 5, 2014. 
  40. ^ Cheryl M. Arcibal (July 8, 2013). "Latest Japanese resto in town wants to conquer Pinoy bellies with pork and ramen | Food". Philstar.com. Retrieved March 3, 2014. 
  41. ^ [1][dead link]
  42. ^ Japanese Diasporas: Unsung Pasts, Conflicting Presents and Uncertain Futures - Google Books. Books.google.com. Retrieved March 3, 2014. 
  43. ^ [2]
  44. ^ Tiu, Cheryl (December 31, 2012). "Best of Manila | CNN Travel". Travel.cnn.com. Retrieved March 3, 2014. 
  45. ^ Renton, Alex (February 26, 2006). "How Sushi ate the World". The Guardian. Retrieved August 20, 2006. 
  46. ^ Kugel, Seth (November 9, 2008). "Rio de Janeiro: Koni Stores". The New York Times. Retrieved May 5, 2010. 
  47. ^ "Japanese cuisine to be nominated for UNESCO world heritage list". Mainichi Daily News. February 18, 2012. Retrieved February 19, 2012. 
  48. ^ UNESCO Culture Sector - Intangible Heritage - 2003 Convention :. Unesco.org. Retrieved on May 24, 2014.
  49. ^ "Japanese cuisine added to UNESCO intangible heritage list". Mainichi Daily News. December 5, 2013. Retrieved December 5, 2013. 

Bibliography

  • Hara, Reiko (2006) International Cuisine: Japan ISBN 0-340-90577-8.

Further reading

(language dictionaries)
  • Hepburn, James Curtis (1888). A Japanese-English and English-Japanese Dictionary. Tokyo: Z.P. Maruya & Company.  (4th edition), 962pp
  • Shinmura, Izuru (1976). (Kjien). Iwanami. . Japanese dictionary.
  • Kindaichi, Kyosuke() (1997), (Shin Meikai Kokugo Jiten)(5th ed.), , ISBN 978-4385130996 
    • Kindaichi, Kyosuke() (1974), (Shin Meikai Kokugo Jiten)(2nd ed.),  
(encyclopedias and topical dictionaries)
  • Heibonsha (1969) [1968]. (Sekai hyakka jiten).  (world encyclopedia, in Japanese).
  • Morimoto, Yoshiaki(); Hinonishi, Sukenori(); Sakamoto, Taro() (1958), (Fzoku Jiten) (snippet), (Tokyodo shuppan) 
  • Kiple, Kenneth F.; Ornelas, Kriemhild (2000). The Cambridge World History of Food 2. Cambridge, UK: ColuCambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-40216-6. 
(Cuisine titles)
  • Cwiertka, Katarzyna Joanna (2006), Modern Japanese Cuisine: Food, Power And National Identity (preview), Reaktion Books, ISBN 978-1-861-89298-0 
  • Rath, Eric C. (2010), Food and Fantasy in Early Modern Japan (preview), University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-26227-0 
(cookbooks)
  • Andoh, Elizabeth (2010), Kansha: Celebrating Japan's Vegan and Vegetarian Traditions (preview), Random House Digital, Inc., ISBN 978-1-580-08955-5 
  • Andoh, Elizabeth (2012), Washoku: Recipes from the Japanese Home Kitchen (preview), Random House Digital, Inc., ISBN 978-030-781355-8 
  • Shimbo, Hiroko (2000), The Japanese Kitchen: 250 Recipes in a Traditional Spirit (preview), Harvard Common Press, ISBN 978-155-832177-9 
  • Tsuji, Shizuo; Fisher, M.F.K.; Reichl, Ruth (2006), (Fzoku Jiten) (preview), Kodansha International, ISBN 978-4-770-03049-8 
(monograms)
  • 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). No. 164. ISSN 1171-9834. 
(guides)
  • Hamano, Fumiko() (2010), Nihon de kuras () (preview), Jt b publishing, ISBN 9-784-533-07976-4  (illusr. with diagrams)

External links

  • Japanese cuisine at DMOZ


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Japanese_cuisine&oldid=643037213"

Japanese cuisine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Japanese cuisine - wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, Japanese cuisine is based on combining the staple food which is steamed white rice or gohan ( with one or

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