Thoughts on Japanese Food
It's funny how so many of the foods eaten by the Japanese on a daily basis aren't very Japanese at all. Sure, people here eat plenty of things that are associated closely with Japan, like soba and udon noodles, sushi and sashimi, or donburi ("big bowl") dishes like gyudon (beef bowl) or oyakodon, the "parent and child" rice bowl consisting of chicken and egg cooked together and put over rice, but there are many non-Japanese foods consumed here, too. Of course, there are many dishes that have been imported from China, like gyoza (pot stickers) or ramen, although the Japanese don't consider the stir-fried yakisoba noodles to be Chinese in origin, much as they look like chow mein to me. The Japanese have internalized foods from many other countries, including Italian spaghetti, French croquetes (which go so well with that Japanese Tonkatsu sauce) or American "hamburg steak" (steak made from ground beef). The single most popular food in Japan might just be that ubiquitous curry rice, the thick curry sauce served over steaming rice, which was imported from India via Britain during the Meiji Era. We probably eat it 4-5 times a week at our house.

Japanese curry rice, food of the gods.



5 Comments:
"Curry rice" is valuable to English-speaking travelers who cannot read a Japanes menu. Nearly every small restaurant will recognize the name and prepare it.
Tempura was Portuguese originally, although after 150 years it probably doesn't count. The Mosono restaurant chain claims to have invented Benihana-style teppenyaki in 1945, but I've also read that it was imported from Korea. I suppose cooking on a flat grill has occurred to many people.
A few years ago I visited an Italian restaurant in Kobe. They displayed stacks of imported ingredients like canned tomatoes from Italy. The special of the day, however, was spaghetti with tuna and curry.
11:57 PM
When I lived on Okinawa as a kid I got used to the packets of curry rice which simply needed to be heated up in boiling water. It was one thing I missed most after moving back to the States.
Imagine my giddiness when I found it in the International aisle at the local grocery store a few years back.
1:19 AM
It's too bad that Curry Rice is nothing like a proper curry...
Mmm... vindaloo...
2:28 AM
I took a friend out for Indian curry and naan lst night, and yes, curry rice is really entirely different from curry rice. But both ar so good... Have Americans started to get over their "I don't like Indian food because they're stealing our tech jobs" phase yet?
11:57 AM
"I don't like Indian food because they're stealing our tech jobs" is something that people are saying here in the U.S.? I've been eating Indian food since college (roughly 12 years) and I think the prejudice that many Americans have against Indian food is more from ignorance about what it will taste like than anger over losing tech jobs.
Many people I know just won't eat things that are unfamiliar, no matter how good you say it is.
2:02 AM
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