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251 articles about Japanese food culture

Funazushi (鮒寿司)
Fermented lake carp aged in rice for a year or more — a sour, funky, cheese-and-sake bomb that turns out to be the great-grandparent of every piece of sushi you've ever eaten.
July 12, 2026
Mehari-zushi (めはり寿司)
A rice ball wrapped head-to-toe in tangy pickled mustard greens, so big and good that the old story says your eyes go wide just to fit it in your mouth.
July 12, 2026
Utsunomiya Gyoza (宇都宮餃子)
A whole plate of pan-fried dumplings with lacquered, crackle-crisp bottoms — in the city that eats more gyoza than anywhere else in Japan and has zero shame about it.
July 12, 2026
Yobuko Squid, Ika Ikizukuri (呼子のイカ活造り)
Squid so fresh the body is still glassy-clear and the legs are still moving when it reaches your table — sweeter and cleaner than any squid you thought you knew, at the little port that made it famous.
July 12, 2026
Dashimaki-tamago (だし巻き卵)
A rolled omelette so soft it almost trembles, layered fold over fold and soaked with dashi so that biting in releases a little warm rush of savory broth — the deceptively simple egg dish that Japanese chefs spend years perfecting.
July 11, 2026
Harumaki (春巻き)
The Japanese spring roll — a shatteringly crisp golden tube that gives way to a hot, savory tangle of pork, cabbage and bamboo shoot, best eaten the second it's cool enough not to burn your mouth (you will not wait that long).
July 11, 2026
Ochazuke (お茶漬け)
Pour hot green tea or dashi over a bowl of rice, scatter something savory on top, and eat — the gentlest, most quietly restorative dish in Japan, the one you reach for late at night when you just need a warm bowl to make everything okay.
July 11, 2026
Yaki-onigiri (焼きおにぎり)
A rice ball brushed with soy sauce and grilled until the outside turns crackly-crisp and the whole thing smells like the best kind of caramelized, toasty comfort — the humble onigiri, upgraded by fire.
July 11, 2026
Anmitsu (あんみつ)
A cool glass bowl of firm agar jelly cubes, sweet red bean, soft mochi and fruit, waiting for you to pour dark sugar syrup over the whole thing — a build-your-own retro parfait that's basically a Japanese sweet-shop in a bowl.
July 10, 2026
Battera (バッテラ)
Osaka's beautiful pressed sushi — vinegar-cured mackerel and rice squared off in a wooden box and crowned with a translucent sheet of kelp, sliced into glossy little bricks that taste like the city's quieter, older idea of sushi.
July 10, 2026
Botan-nabe (牡丹鍋)
Wild boar, sliced so thin and marbled that it's laid out like the petals of a peony flower, then simmered in a sweet-savory miso broth in the mountains of Hyogo — the winter game dish that tastes nothing like you're bracing for.
July 10, 2026
Cream Korokke (クリームコロッケ)
A crisp golden shell that gives way to a scalding rush of white béchamel cream — the croquette that trades the potato for pure molten sauce, and asks only that you not bite too eagerly.
July 10, 2026
Doria (ドリア)
Buttered rice under a blanket of creamy béchamel and browned cheese, baked until it's bubbling at the edges — a Japanese invention that sounds like it shouldn't work and is, in fact, pure molten comfort.
July 10, 2026
Gohei-mochi (五平餅)
Pounded rice flattened onto a wooden paddle, slathered in a sweet-savory walnut-and-sesame miso glaze, and grilled over coals until the edges char — the smoky, sticky, gloriously messy soul food of Japan's central mountains.
July 10, 2026
Gyukatsu (牛カツ)
A thick slab of beef in a crunchy panko crust, deep-fried for seconds so the inside stays rosy and rare — then handed to you with a searing-hot stone so you can grill each bite exactly how you like it.
July 10, 2026
Imagawayaki (今川焼き)
A hot little drum of pancake batter with a molten core of sweet red bean, pressed in a circular iron mold and handed to you steaming — the cheap, perfect street sweet that Japan can't even agree on the name of.
July 10, 2026
Kaki no Dotenabe (牡蠣の土手鍋)
Hiroshima's plump winter oysters, simmered in a pot ringed with a 'dyke' of sweet miso that you scrape into the broth as you go — a hot pot you literally build the flavor of, one swipe at a time.
July 10, 2026
Kasujiru (粕汁)
The warming winter soup that puts the leftovers of sake-making to glorious use — cloudy, faintly boozy, deeply comforting, thick with salmon and root vegetables and the smell of a Kansai kitchen in January.
July 10, 2026
Kimchi-nabe (キムチ鍋)
The hot pot that fights back — a bubbling red cauldron of kimchi, pork belly and tofu that makes you sweat in the best way, and has quietly become one of the most-eaten winter dinners in Japan.
July 10, 2026
Menchi-katsu (メンチカツ)
A deep-fried patty of seasoned minced meat in a crunchy panko shell that, when you bite it hot from a butcher-shop counter, gushes juice down your wrist and makes you forget you were walking somewhere.
July 10, 2026
Napolitan (ナポリタン)
Ketchup spaghetti. Say it with a straight face, because Japan's retro-diner tangle of ketchup-glossed noodles, sausage and green pepper is comfort food so unapologetic it comes back around to genuinely great.
July 10, 2026
Negiyaki (ねぎ焼き)
Okonomiyaki's leaner, greener Osaka cousin — a thin griddle cake packed with a mountain of chopped green onion instead of cabbage, savory with beef tendon, and finished with soy instead of sweet sauce.
July 10, 2026
Ozoni (お雑煮)
The mochi soup Japan eats on New Year's morning — a bowl so personal that its broth, its mochi shape, and its toppings change from region to region and even house to house, making it the most intimate dish in the country.
July 10, 2026
Sakura Mochi (桜餅)
A pink mochi filled with sweet red bean and wrapped in a real, salted cherry-blossom leaf you're meant to eat — the taste of Japanese spring in a single, faintly floral, sweet-and-salty bite.
July 10, 2026
Uiro (ういろう)
A steamed cake of rice flour and sugar that's somehow both chewy and clean, mild and moreish — Nagoya's understated, faintly wobbly sweet that grows on you until you can't stop buying it at the station.
July 10, 2026
Warabimochi (わらび餅)
Cool, wobbling cubes of near-translucent jelly, rolled in nutty roasted soybean flour and drizzled with dark brown sugar syrup — the jiggliest, most refreshing sweet in Japan, and a texture you'll chase forever.
July 10, 2026
Yosenabe (寄せ鍋)
The hot pot Japan actually eats at home on cold nights — a bubbling communal pot of chicken, seafood, tofu and vegetables where the whole point is that everyone leans in, cooks together, and fights gently over the last piece.
July 10, 2026
Yuba (湯葉)
The delicate skin that forms on warm soy milk, lifted off in silky sheets and eaten with barely anything on it — Kyoto's quietest luxury, a food that tastes like patience itself.
July 10, 2026
Abura Soba (油そば)
No soup. Just noodles, a hidden pool of tare and oil at the bottom of the bowl, and thirty seconds of frantic mixing that turns it into one of Tokyo's most addictive cheap thrills.
July 9, 2026
Asahikawa Ramen (旭川ラーメン)
A slick of lard traps the heat so your soy broth stays scalding to the last drop — because in Asahikawa, the cold outside is trying to kill your ramen. It loses.
July 9, 2026
Chirashi-zushi (ちらし寿司)
Sushi that gave up on tidy little pieces and just threw everything into a bowl — glossy sashimi in the city, confetti-bright vegetables and egg at home. Either way it's the most joyful, least intimidating way to eat sushi in Japan.
July 9, 2026
Chukadon (中華丼)
A glossy landslide of stir-fried pork and vegetables under a thick, glistening ankake sauce, poured steaming over rice. Cheap, hot, and hearty — the town-Chinese diner's answer to a bad day.
July 9, 2026
Edomae-zushi (江戸前寿司)
The original Tokyo nigiri, born before refrigerators existed — cured, marinated, simmered by hand, then pressed onto warm rice in a single confident motion. This is where sushi actually comes from, and it's a craft, not a slab of raw fish.
July 9, 2026
Hakodate Shio Ramen (函館塩ラーメン)
Clear as tea, gold as morning light, quiet as a held breath — this is the ramen that proves subtraction is a flavor. Hokkaido's gentle bowl, and my hangover's best friend.
July 9, 2026
Iekei Ramen (家系ラーメン)
Thick noodles in a pork-and-soy powerhouse, crowned with spinach and giant sheets of nori — and a bowl of white rice standing by as its secret weapon. Yokohama's build-it-your-way monster.
July 9, 2026
Ikura-don (いくら丼)
A bowl heaped with glistening orange salmon roe, each bead a little grenade of the sea. Ridiculous, glorious, and completely worth the guilt — Hokkaido's most obscene one-topping wonder.
July 9, 2026
Inari-zushi (稲荷寿司)
A little pouch of sweet, juicy fried tofu stuffed with sushi rice — no raw fish, no fuss, endlessly portable, and impossible to eat just one of. Named after a fox god who supposedly can't resist fried tofu either.
July 9, 2026
Kagoshima Ramen (鹿児島ラーメン)
Kyushu's black sheep tonkotsu — softer, rounder, semi-cloudy — served with pickled radish and a hot cup of tea like it's a whole little ceremony. The gentle giant of pork-bone ramen.
July 9, 2026
Kaisen-don (海鮮丼)
A whole ocean, sliced and fanned over rice — tuna, salmon, scallop, sweet shrimp, a golden slick of ikura. The greediest, most gorgeous bowl in Japan, and I'd cross a country for the good ones.
July 9, 2026
Kamaage Udon (釜揚げうどん)
Straight from the pot to your tub, still swimming in its own cloudy cooking water, steam curling up — no cold rinse, no soup, nothing hiding the noodle. Kagawa serves udon at its softest, warmest, most naked, and it's a revelation.
July 9, 2026
Taiwan Mazesoba (台湾まぜそば)
Break the egg yolk, plunge in, and mix like you're furious — this brothless Nagoya bomb of spicy pork, raw garlic and chives doesn't reveal itself until it's a chaotic, glorious mess.
July 9, 2026
Tanindon (他人丼)
Beef and egg who've never met, thrown together in sweet dashi over rice — the cheeky Kansai bowl with the best name in Japan. Oyakodon's troublemaker cousin, and quietly just as good.
July 9, 2026
Tekkadon (鉄火丼)
Cold slices of lean tuna over warm vinegared rice, a hit of wasabi, a splash of soy — nothing else, and it needs nothing else. Born in gambling dens for players who wanted one clean, one-handed bite of pure tuna joy.
July 9, 2026
Yaki Udon (焼きうどん)
Fat udon noodles thrown on a hot griddle, seared with pork and cabbage until glossy and browned, then crowned with bonito flakes that literally dance. Kokura's post-war comfort food, and I love it more than yakisoba.
July 9, 2026
Agedashi-dofu (揚げ出し豆腐)
The crackly fried shell holds for exactly one bite, then collapses into warm silk in a puddle of dashi — this is the tofu dish that converts tofu skeptics.
July 5, 2026
Anago Meshi (あなご飯)
It fell apart under my chopsticks before I'd even applied pressure — no bite required, just a soft collapse into something between fish and silk.
July 5, 2026
Anko-nabe (あんこう鍋)
One of the ugliest fish in the entire ocean somehow makes one of the best winter pots in Japan — and the secret weapon is its liver, melted straight into the broth until the whole thing turns rich enough to make you gasp.
July 5, 2026
Castella (カステラ)
The moment my teeth hit the bottom crust I felt those sugar crystals crunch — and I sat there in the Nagasaki shop grinning like I'd found treasure, because in a way I had.
July 5, 2026
Chagayu (茶がゆ)
A thin, tea-colored rice porridge so gentle it almost isn't there — Nara has started its mornings with this whisper of a breakfast for over a thousand years.
July 5, 2026
Chan-chan-yaki (ちゃんちゃん焼き)
Salmon and a mountain of cabbage hit a screaming iron plate, and then someone drops in the miso-butter — that hiss is the sound of a fisherman's dinner that outgrew the boat.
July 5, 2026
Chanko-nabe (ちゃんこ鍋)
The pot that lands on your table is so absurdly loaded you assume it's a mistake, that it was meant for a table of six — and then you realize, no, this is what sumo wrestlers eat to become the size of a small car.
July 5, 2026
Chawanmushi (茶碗蒸し)
It arrives in a little lidded cup looking like custard — then the spoon sinks in and it's savory, warm, and hiding treasure at the bottom.
July 5, 2026
Dagojiru (だご汁)
The dumplings weren't neat little balls — they were flat, torn-looking, chewy straps of dough sliding through miso broth, and one bowl on a cold day undid every knot in my shoulders.
July 5, 2026
Dojo-nabe (どぜう鍋)
They set a flat iron pan in front of you, and it vanishes under a green avalanche — a whole mountain of chopped negi so tall you can't even see the fish it's burying. That's not garnish. That's the dish.
July 5, 2026
Doteyaki (どて焼き)
Beef tendon simmered for hours in dark miso until it goes soft, sticky, and almost sinful — this is the skewer that made me understand Osaka's love affair with cheap beer.
July 5, 2026
Echizen Crab Meshi (越前かに飯)
A whole snow crab is a glorious, sticky, two-handed wrestling match — but someone in Fukui already did all the work and piled the sweet white meat over rice for you.
July 5, 2026
Escalope (エスカロープ)
A pork cutlet on buttered rice, drowned in demi-glace, invented at the far eastern edge of Japan — retro Western food from a town most maps forget.
July 5, 2026
Fukagawa Meshi (深川めし)
Clam broth soaked so deep into the rice that the rice itself becomes the point — this is what Tokyo's dockworkers ate before Tokyo had a skyline.
July 5, 2026
Hamamatsu Gyoza (浜松餃子)
A ring of gyoza with a snowy mound of bean sprouts sitting in the hole at the center — like the plate itself is winking at you before you've picked up your chopsticks.
July 5, 2026
Hanton Rice (ハントンライス)
Ketchup rice, wrapped in egg, crowned with deep-fried fish, drowned in tartar sauce and a red ketchup swirl — Kanazawa built a plate with zero business working this well, and it works perfectly.
July 5, 2026
Hayashi Rice (ハヤシライス)
Curry's quieter, browner cousin — thin beef and onions melted into a glossy demi-glace sauce over rice, and the dish your Japanese friend's mom probably makes best.
July 5, 2026
Himeji Oden (姫路おでん)
I dunked a chunk of daikon into the little dish of ginger soy sauce out of pure curiosity, and it rearranged how I think about oden completely — where has this been all my life?
July 5, 2026
Hiroshima Kaki Fry (広島かきフライ)
Crack the golden crust and the oyster inside is still plump and full of the sea — the fried food that finally made me understand why people drive to Hiroshima in winter.
July 5, 2026
Hiroshima Tsukemen (広島つけ麺)
My mouth was on fire and I was still going back for more — that particular kind of pain that somehow tells your brain to keep eating instead of stop.
July 5, 2026
Honetsuki-dori (骨付鳥)
You don't cut it, you don't fork it — you grab the bone with a napkin and bite, and the first thing that hits you is the black pepper, hard, before you've even tasted the chicken.
July 5, 2026
Ichigo-ni (いちご煮)
I ordered it expecting something fruity and got a bowl of the ocean at its most expensive instead — sea urchin and abalone floating in a broth so clear you could read through it.
July 5, 2026
Ikameshi (いかめし)
A whole squid, stuffed to bursting with sweet-soy rice and sliced into glossy rings — proof that the best meal in the station might be the cheap one in the box.
July 5, 2026
Ikayaki (いか焼き)
Not the whole grilled squid you're picturing from festival stalls — this is a flat, folded, sauce-slicked flour pancake, and Osaka has been quietly obsessed with it for decades.
July 5, 2026
Imabari Yakibuta Tamago Meshi (今治焼豚玉子飯)
I broke the yolk and watched it slide down over the roast pork and the glossy sauce and the rice, and I understood, in that exact second, why an entire town claims this bowl as its own.
July 5, 2026
Izumo Zenzai (出雲ぜんざい)
Whole red beans, still holding their shape, in a warm sweet broth with a soft chewy mochi hiding at the bottom — and the town says this is where the whole dish was born.
July 5, 2026
Jibuni (治部煮)
A tiny dab of wasabi on top of a warm, glossy duck stew — it sounds wrong, it looks fussy, and then the spoon hits your mouth and you go quiet.
July 5, 2026
Katsuo-meshi (かつおめし)
Straw fire, three feet high, a slab of fish blackening in the flames — and then somehow that same fish is on my rice, smoky-edged and ruby-red in the middle, and I forget how to talk for a second.
July 5, 2026
Keichan (けいちゃん)
Chicken and cabbage hit a screaming-hot iron plate slathered in miso, and the whole table leans in — this is food you cook together, argue over, and fight for the last piece of.
July 5, 2026
Kenchin-jiru (けんちん汁)
A monk broke a block of tofu apart with his bare hands instead of throwing it away, sautéed it with root vegetables, and accidentally invented one of Japan's most comforting soups.
July 5, 2026
Kobe Beef (神戸牛)
One bite and the fat basically evaporates on your tongue before you've even started chewing — I actually laughed out loud at the table, alone, like an idiot.
July 5, 2026
Kozuyu (こづゆ)
A tiny red lacquer bowl of soup that a whole region reaches for whenever something matters — weddings, New Year, the moments you want to remember.
July 5, 2026
Kumamoto Ramen (熊本ラーメン)
There's a black, glossy pool sitting on top of the broth, and it smells like garlic that's been dared to become something else entirely.
July 5, 2026
Kurobuta Tonkatsu (黒豚とんかつ)
The fat didn't just sit there being fat — it kept melting into the meat with every bite, and I stopped talking mid-sentence to deal with it properly.
July 5, 2026
Monjayaki (もんじゃ焼き)
It looks like a griddle accident, tastes like a savory soup that decided to crisp up, and somehow gets more addictive the messier it gets.
July 5, 2026
Nagoya Cochin (名古屋コーチン)
Everyone warns you about the chewiness like it's a flaw — but that first spring-back bite of charcoal-grilled thigh is exactly the point, and I get it now.
July 5, 2026
Namero (なめろう)
Fishermen chopped their catch with a blob of miso until it turned into a sticky, savory paste — and refused to wait for a kitchen to do it properly.
July 5, 2026
Noppe (のっぺ)
A spoon goes into the bowl and comes out coated, silky, clinging — like the broth itself has opinions about leaving. Niigata's grandmother stew doesn't announce itself, and that's exactly why it wins.
July 5, 2026
Ryukyu (りゅうきゅう)
I ordered it braced for plain sashimi and got fish that had been sitting in a soy-sesame marinade until it turned silky and deep — then someone poured hot tea over the leftovers and somehow it got even better.
July 5, 2026
Sanpei-jiru (三平汁)
No miso, no cream, no drama — just salted fish and root vegetables in a clear broth so honest it tastes like a Hokkaido winter finally letting its guard down.
July 5, 2026
Sanzoku-yaki (山賊焼き)
It's not a piece of fried chicken — it's a whole flattened thigh the size of your face, cragged with garlic-soy crust, and it arrives daring you to finish it.
July 5, 2026
Sasakamaboko (笹かまぼこ)
Grilled fresh off the rack, it snaps back against your teeth and tastes purely of the sea — a leaf-shaped little thing that ruined every rubbery fish cake I'd met before it.
July 5, 2026
Shijimi Soup (しじみ汁)
Tiny black clams the size of a fingernail, and somehow they make a miso soup deep enough to fix a rough morning — this is the bowl Shimane wakes up to.
July 5, 2026
Shinshu Salmon (信州サーモン)
Landlocked Nagano, ringed by mountains, hours from any sea — and it's serving some of the cleanest, sweetest salmon sashimi I've put in my mouth.
July 5, 2026
Shiroebi-don (白えび丼)
A whole bowl piled with hundreds of tiny, ghost-pink shrimp so delicate they barely hold their shape — and then they dissolve into pure sweetness before you can even chew.
July 5, 2026
Shizuoka Tororo-jiru (静岡とろろ汁)
It slides off the spoon in one glossy, unbroken rope and refuses to let go — and travelers have been slurping this exact sticky bowl on the old Tokaido road for 400 years.
July 5, 2026
Shottsuru-nabe (しょっつる鍋)
Winter in Akita means a clear pot bubbling with whole silvery fish and one funky, ancient fish sauce doing all the heavy lifting — and it lifts.
July 5, 2026
Soba-meshi (そばめし)
Fried noodles and rice, chopped together and griddled into one browned, sauce-soaked, gloriously excessive plate — Kobe invented double carbs and I will defend it forever.
July 5, 2026
Tamago Kake Gohan (卵かけご飯)
A raw egg, hot rice, a splash of soy sauce, thirty seconds of stirring — and somehow it's the breakfast half of Japan would defend with their lives.
July 5, 2026
Tebichi (てびち)
It wobbled when the bowl hit the table — actually jiggled — and I hesitated for one honest second before the first bite dissolved into warm, savory collagen and I understood why Okinawans swear by it.
July 5, 2026
Tofu Chikuwa (豆腐ちくわ)
Half tofu, half fish paste, and lighter than either one has any right to be — Tottori took a chewy snack tube and made it pillowy, and I'm still thinking about it.
July 5, 2026
Tokushima-don (徳島丼)
It's chicken over rice — but it's a very specific chicken, one Tokushima is quietly, competitively proud of, and once you know the backstory you'll never call it 'just a rice bowl' again.
July 5, 2026
Towada Barayaki (十和田バラ焼き)
A hot plate arrives buried under onions, and you can't even see the beef yet — then it starts to sizzle down into a sweet-soy sauce and the whole table goes quiet. This is not yakiniku. This is Towada's own thing.
July 5, 2026
Yanagawa-nabe (柳川鍋)
A shallow pan arrives with a soft golden lid of just-set egg trembling on top, and hidden underneath is the ingredient old Edo swore by for surviving the summer — a fish most travelers have never knowingly eaten.
July 5, 2026
Yokote Yakisoba (横手やきそば)
A fried egg cracked whole on top of a plate of yakisoba, a pile of red pickles on the side — and suddenly regular yakisoba looks unfinished. Akita's snow country did this one on purpose.
July 5, 2026
Yudofu (湯豆腐)
A pot of hot water, some blocks of tofu, and somehow that's the whole meal — and somehow that's exactly the point.
July 5, 2026
Bara-zushi (ばらずし)
One plate, eight or nine kinds of seafood, and not a single grain of rice left uncovered — Okayama basically dared its neighbors to out-decorate this and nobody has.
July 4, 2026
Enban Gyoza (円盤餃子)
Thirty gyoza fused into one crackling golden disc, and the only way to serve it is whole, so the whole table has to fight over the first piece.
July 4, 2026
Fugu (ふぐ)
The fish that can kill you is sliced so thin you can read the pattern on the plate through it — and somehow that's the least unsettling part of the meal.
July 4, 2026
Harako Meshi (はらこ飯)
Rice cooked in the same broth as the salmon that's sitting on top of it, then crowned with roe so fresh it still pops between your teeth — this is a river town's autumn in a bowl.
July 4, 2026
Ishikari Nabe (石狩鍋)
A whole clay pot of salmon, bubbling in miso, steam fogging up the window while snow piles up outside — this is what winter in Hokkaido actually tastes like.
July 4, 2026
Jimami Tofu (じーまーみ豆腐)
It jiggles like tofu, it tastes like peanuts, and it took me three spoonfuls to accept that both of those things were happening in my mouth at the same time.
July 4, 2026
Karashi Renkon (からし蓮根)
Someone looked at a lotus root's natural holes and thought: those need to be filled with fire. I bit in expecting a snack. I got a sinus-clearing act of devotion.
July 4, 2026
Muroran Yakitori (室蘭やきとり)
I ordered yakitori expecting chicken. What landed on the plate was pork, onion, and a smear of mustard so aggressive it cleared my sinuses — and I still went back for seconds.
July 4, 2026
Nabeyaki Ramen (鍋焼きラーメン)
It arrives still boiling, in the clay pot it was cooked in, an egg cracked on top going from raw to soft-set right in front of you — this is not a bowl of ramen, it's a tiny pot of lava with noodles in it.
July 4, 2026
Oroshi Soba (おろし蕎麦)
A mountain of grated daikon on cold buckwheat noodles, and the first bite is colder and sharper than any noodle dish has a right to be.
July 4, 2026
Sara Udon (皿うどん)
A mountain of noodles fried until they shatter like glass, then drowned in a sauce so glossy it looks lacquered. I attacked it with chopsticks and lost the first round.
July 4, 2026
Satsuma Age (さつま揚げ)
No batter. No breading. Just fish, pounded into paste and fried until the outside turns the color of good leather. I bit in expecting crunch and got something closer to a warm hug.
July 4, 2026
Shirakawa Ramen (白河ラーメン)
Noodles so wide and wavy they look hand-torn, floating in a broth so clear you can read the bowl's pattern straight through it.
July 4, 2026
Shirasu Don (しらす丼)
A mountain of tiny, glistening baby fish piled so high it eclipses the rice underneath — and somehow that's the appeal.
July 4, 2026
Uwajima Taimeshi (宇和島鯛めし)
You crack a raw egg into your rice, drown it in sea-bream sashimi and a soy-dashi sauce, and mix like nobody's watching — Uwajima's version of taimeshi has nothing to do with the cooked rice dish everyone assumes it is.
July 4, 2026
Taipien (太平燕)
A whole fried egg, golden and round, floating in the middle of a clear soup like it's holding court. I circled it with my chopsticks for a full minute before I dared touch it.
July 4, 2026
Tonteki (トンテキ)
A slab of pork the thickness of your fist, seared black-brown and drowning in garlic sauce — this is not the polite cutlet you were expecting.
July 4, 2026
Toyohashi Curry Udon (豊橋カレーうどん)
Eat the noodles, drink the broth, and just when you think the bowl is empty — dig down and find an entirely second meal waiting underneath.
July 4, 2026
Umibudo (海ぶどう)
Tiny green beads burst between my teeth, one after another, like the ocean somehow figured out how to make caviar out of a salad.
July 4, 2026
Yokosuka Navy Curry (よこすか海軍カレー)
A whole naval fleet's worth of comfort on one plate — beef curry, a glass of milk, and a salad, standing at attention like it's inspection day.
July 4, 2026
Hoba Miso (朴葉味噌)
Sweet miso bubbling and caramelizing on a big dried magnolia leaf over a tabletop flame — Hida-Takayama's mountain breakfast turns one scoop of miso into the best reason to keep eating rice.
July 3, 2026
Ise Udon (伊勢うどん)
Fat, pillowy udon so soft it barely fights back, glossed in a dark, sweet-savory tare instead of soup. Ise's pilgrim food breaks every udon rule on purpose — and after a day on your feet, it's exactly right.
July 3, 2026
Kishimen (きしめん)
Silky ribbons of udon, wide and thin, slipping through a clear golden dashi before you can even aim your chopsticks. Nagoya's flat-noodle bowl is the quiet, addictive one you inhale standing up at the station.
July 3, 2026
Mizutaki (水炊き)
A pale, cloudy chicken broth so pure it stops you mid-sentence. Hakata's gentle chicken hot pot is winter comfort itself — dipped in citrus ponzu, finished as rice porridge, warm to the very last drop.
July 3, 2026
Motsunabe (もつ鍋)
Soft, clean, and drowning in garlic and chives — Hakata's offal hot pot turns the scariest thing on the menu into the best. A steamy communal pot that makes a table of strangers feel like old friends by the last spoonful.
July 3, 2026
Taiwan Ramen (台湾ラーメン)
A chili-red bowl buried under a mountain of garlicky, fiery minced pork — invented in Nagoya, named after Taiwan, and hotter than either has any right to be. Your scalp will know within one mouthful.
July 3, 2026
Tekone-zushi (てこね寿司)
Dark, glossy slices of soy-soaked bonito, still cool from the sea, mixed straight into warm vinegared rice with someone's bare hands. I took one bite on the ferry dock and forgot to keep walking.
July 3, 2026
Tenmusu (天むす)
Little rice balls with a crisp shrimp tempura tail poking out of each one — Nagoya's portable genius, sold by the boxful and gone before your train pulls out of the station.
July 3, 2026
Akashiyaki (明石焼き)
Imagine takoyaki, but so soft it barely holds together — pale, eggy, wobbling on a wooden board, and dunked into a bowl of warm dashi instead of drowned in sauce. Akashi's gentle original.
July 1, 2026
Ebi Furai (エビフライ)
CRUNCH. That's the sound, and honestly that's the review. A fat prawn in a craggy panko coat, tail-on for a handle, a blob of tartar on the side. Pure joy in fried form.
July 1, 2026
Goya Chanpuru (ゴーヤチャンプルー)
The first bite is bitter — properly, defiantly bitter — and then, somehow, you want another. Okinawa's home-style stir-fry is an acquired love that doesn't take long to acquire.
July 1, 2026
Hiyashi Chuka (冷やし中華)
One day it's too hot to even look at a steaming bowl of ramen — and the next, every shop slaps up a banner: cold ramen has started. Summer, in noodle form.
July 1, 2026
Kakinoha-zushi (柿の葉寿司)
Pressed sushi wrapped in a persimmon leaf and left to mellow — mountain food from landlocked Nara, where salted mackerel learned to travel. Unwrap it like a tiny present.
July 1, 2026
Miso Ramen (味噌ラーメン)
The butter melted into the red-brown broth and I nearly teared up. Sapporo's answer to a brutal winter: a bowl so rich and warm it feels like being wrapped in a blanket.
July 1, 2026
Oden (おでん)
Winter, a convenience store at midnight, and that smell — warm dashi drifting from a steaming tray by the register. Point at a daikon, an egg, a triangle of konnyaku. Cheapest comfort in Japan.
July 1, 2026
Omi Champon (近江ちゃんぽん)
A mountain of vegetables in a broth so clear you'd never guess the name. Shiga's champon ditched the milky pork soup for a clean dashi — and a splash of vinegar you add yourself.
July 1, 2026
Rafute (ラフテー)
It didn't need a knife. The chopsticks just sank through it. Okinawa's slow-braised pork belly, glossy and melting, simmered in island liquor until it barely holds together.
July 1, 2026
Sata Andagi (サーターアンダギー)
Still warm, the crust cracked open at the top like it had bloomed. Crisp outside, cakey inside — Okinawa's fried doughnut that is absolutely not a doughnut.
July 1, 2026
Takayama Ramen (高山ラーメン)
Thin, curly noodles in a soy broth the color of weak tea, in a snowbound mountain town that never got the memo that ramen had to be heavy. Hida-Takayama's quiet, soy-clear classic.
July 1, 2026
Tsukemen (つけ麺)
The noodles come naked on their own plate, next to a small bowl of something dark and intense. You dip. And then you understand why people line up for this.
July 1, 2026
Hiyajiru (冷や汁)
Cold miso soup. Poured over hot rice. In summer. I know how that sounds — I thought the same thing. Then I ate it on a brutal August afternoon in Miyazaki and understood exactly why farmers have been making it for centuries.
June 28, 2026
Katsuura Tantanmen (勝浦タンタンメン)
Not the creamy sesame tantanmen you know. This is a bowl of fire-red chili oil, minced pork and raw onion, invented by fishermen to thaw out after a freezing morning at sea. It bites back.
June 28, 2026
Keihan (鶏飯)
Shredded chicken, golden egg, nori and toppings over rice — and then someone pours clear, hot chicken broth over the whole thing at the table. The most soothing bowl in the south. I have rarely felt so instantly calm about a meal.
June 28, 2026
Oyaki (おやき)
A chewy, lightly charred bun from the Nagano mountains, stuffed with pickled greens or eggplant miso instead of anything sweet. Farmhouse food that tastes like a cold morning by an irori hearth.
June 28, 2026
Sano Ramen (佐野ラーメン)
Noodles hand-pressed with a bamboo pole, flat and gloriously uneven, swimming in a soy broth so clear you can see the bottom of the bowl. Tochigi's ramen is a quiet masterclass in less-is-more.
June 28, 2026
Senbei-jiru (せんべい汁)
They put crackers in the hotpot. On purpose. Then they cooked them until the edges went soft and chewy like little dumplings — and I stopped doubting Hachinohe and started asking for seconds.
June 28, 2026
Sicilian Rice (シシリアンライス)
Warm rice, sweet-savory grilled beef, a heap of fresh raw vegetables, and a zigzag of mayonnaise — all on one flat plate. It has nothing to do with Italy, nobody's quite sure where the name came from, and Saga City eats it for lunch like it's the most normal thing in the world.
June 28, 2026
Toriten (とり天)
I bit in expecting karaage and got something else entirely — a cloud-light tempura coating, juicy chicken, and a splash of citrus-soy ponzu. This is Oita's chicken tempura, and it deserves to be as famous as its fried cousin.
June 28, 2026
Fukui Sauce Katsudon (福井ソースカツ丼)
No egg. No onion. No broth. Just crisp thin cutlets fully bathed in a dark sweet-tangy sauce over hot rice. Fukui's katsudon throws out the rulebook — and it's a revelation.
June 27, 2026
Hegi Soba (へぎそば)
Soba bound with seaweed, served in neat one-bite coils on a long wooden tray — silky, slippery, impossibly springy. Niigata's textile country turned noodles into something you've never quite chewed before.
June 27, 2026
Imoni (芋煮)
A bubbling pot of taro and beef in sweet soy broth, cooked on a riverbank under autumn leaves with everyone you know. It's not just a stew — it's a season, and a reason to gather.
June 27, 2026
Inaniwa Udon (稲庭うどん)
Udon so thin and silky it slips down before you've decided to chew. Three hundred years of hand-pulling, served cold with a dark dipping sauce. The most elegant noodle in Japan.
June 27, 2026
Izumo Soba (出雲そば)
Three little lacquered tiers of dark, husk-and-all buckwheat, eaten in the shadow of Japan's oldest great shrine. You pour the broth straight on, stack the dishes down, and taste soba the way the gods' country has done it for centuries.
June 27, 2026
Jakoten (じゃこ天)
A rough little fried fish cake made from whole small fish — bones, skin and all — minced and griddled till golden. Humble, fishy in the best way, and weirdly addictive. Ehime's honest snack.
June 27, 2026
Kanazawa Curry (金沢カレー)
Curry so thick and dark it stands the fork up — served on a steel plate, crowned with a sauced-up katsu, cold cabbage on the side. Ishikawa's gloriously stubborn take on comfort food.
June 27, 2026
Katsuo no Tataki (カツオの藁焼き)
Bonito seared over a roaring straw fire — charred and smoky on the outside, ruby-red and raw within. Kochi's signature, and one of the great fish dishes of Japan.
June 27, 2026
Kawara Soba (瓦そば)
Green tea noodles served sizzling on a hot roof tile, piled with beef and shredded egg, the bottom layer going crispy against the clay. Yamaguchi turned a battlefield legend into one of the most fun things you can eat.
June 27, 2026
Kiritanpo (きりたんぽ)
Pounded rice toasted onto cedar sticks, then dropped into a clear chicken hot pot until it drinks the broth. Akita in a bowl, and it tastes like coming in from the snow.
June 27, 2026
Masu no Sushi (ます寿司)
A pink wheel of pressed trout sushi, packed tight in a round wooden box and wrapped in bamboo leaves. You unwrap it like a present and cut it like a cake. Toyama's most beautiful lunch.
June 27, 2026
Okayama Demi-Katsudon (岡山デミカツ丼)
Katsudon with no egg and no dashi — just a crisp pork cutlet on rice, drowned in glossy brown demi-glace like something off a Western diner menu. Okayama looked at katsudon and poured gravy on it, and it works absurdly well.
June 27, 2026
Sanuki Udon (讃岐うどん)
Thick, square-edged, defiantly chewy udon in a clear dashi — so good that a whole prefecture rebranded itself 'Udon Prefecture.' You grab a tray, you slurp, you leave changed.
June 27, 2026
Tokushima Ramen (徳島ラーメン)
Dark, sweet-salty pork-soy broth, sticky-sweet simmered pork belly instead of chashu, and a raw egg cracked right on top. A ramen that eats like a meal over rice — because it kind of is.
June 27, 2026
Tottori Gyukotsu Ramen (鳥取牛骨ラーメン)
Ramen broth simmered from beef bones instead of pork — sweet, deep, and quietly unusual in a country obsessed with tonkotsu. Tottori has been eating it this way since the postwar years and barely told anyone.
June 27, 2026
Zunda Mochi (ずんだ餅)
Soft mochi smothered in a vivid green paste of mashed young soybeans — sweet, grassy, faintly savory, and a color that stops you in the street. Sendai's most beautiful sweet.
June 27, 2026
Nagasaki Champon (長崎ちゃんぽん)
Thick noodles in a milky pork broth buried under a stir-fried mountain of pork, squid, shrimp, cabbage, and fish cake — all cooked in one pan. Invented to feed broke students, perfected into one of Japan's great bowls.
June 26, 2026
Hitsumabushi (ひつまぶし)
Charcoal-grilled eel over rice — but Nagoya makes you eat it three different ways from the same tub, and the third way (drowned in dashi) might ruin every other eel dish for you forever.
June 26, 2026
Kitakata Ramen (喜多方ラーメン)
Flat, wide, curly noodles in a clear soy broth so clean you can see the bottom of the bowl — and a town so obsessed it eats ramen for breakfast. This is comfort with the volume turned down, on purpose.
June 26, 2026
Onomichi Ramen (尾道ラーメン)
Clear soy broth from the Seto Inland Sea, studded with little pillows of melting pork fat that change everything. A hillside port town's bowl — light and deep at the same time, which shouldn't be possible.
June 26, 2026
Soup Curry (スープカレー)
Not curry on rice. Curry as a thin, fragrant, spice-loaded soup with a whole chicken leg standing up in it. Sapporo invented this, and after one bowl in the snow you understand exactly why.
June 26, 2026
Toyama Black Ramen (富山ブラックラーメン)
A bowl of ramen so dark it looks like ink, so salty it was built to be eaten with a side of rice. Toyama's black-broth monster isn't subtle — and that's the entire point.
June 26, 2026
Wakayama Ramen (和歌山ラーメン)
Pork-bone-meets-soy broth, thin springy noodles — and a self-serve table loaded with pressed mackerel sushi and boiled eggs you grab while you wait. Locals don't even call it ramen. They call it the good stuff.
June 26, 2026
Zangi (ザンギ)
Hokkaido's fried chicken — bigger, darker, and more deeply marinated than karaage, with a craggy soy-garlic crust and juice that runs when you tear it open. Don't call it karaage up here.
June 26, 2026
Ankake Spaghetti (あんかけスパ)
Nagoya's gloriously wrong spaghetti: thick noodles smothered in a dark, spiced meat sauce that's been thickened into something between gravy and curry. Italy has no idea this exists. Nagoya doesn't care.
June 25, 2026
Atsugi Shirokoro-Horumon (厚木シロコロ・ホルモン)
B-1 Grand Prix champion. Thick-cut pig large intestine grilled until the outside shatters and the inside goes creamy. It sounds alarming. It tastes like the best thing you've eaten all week.
June 25, 2026
Basashi (馬刺し)
Raw horse meat, sliced thin, eaten with ginger and garlic and soy. Kumamoto's most provocative delicacy. Cleaner than beef, richer than tuna, and once you've tried it, you'll stop being surprised and start being converted.
June 25, 2026
Chicken Nanban (チキン南蛮)
Deep-fried chicken soaked in sweet vinegar sauce, then buried under a snowdrift of homemade tartar. Miyazaki's greatest contribution to the art of fried chicken, and it's not even close.
June 25, 2026
Fujinomiya Yakisoba (富士宮やきそば)
The yakisoba that won Japan's biggest B-grade food competition. Twice. Thick chewy noodles, lard frying, fish powder topping — this is what yakisoba becomes when a whole city decides to take it seriously.
June 25, 2026
Hoto (ほうとう)
Yamanashi's ancient mountain stew: wide flat noodles made without salt, simmered directly in miso broth with pumpkin until everything thickens into something halfway between soup and casserole. Cold outside. Hot in the pot.
June 25, 2026
Jajamen (じゃじゃ麺)
Morioka's strangest noodle: flat udon topped with a miso-meat paste you stir yourself, eaten down to the last noodle, then you crack a raw egg into the remaining sauce and the kitchen pours broth over it. That's the real ending.
June 25, 2026
Jingisukan (ジンギスカン)
Hokkaido's mutton BBQ: lamb and vegetables sizzled on a domed iron pan, dipped in a sweet-soy tare that cuts right through the richness. Named after Genghis Khan. Eaten outdoors in the cold. Absolutely correct.
June 25, 2026
Kofu Torimotsu-ni (甲府鳥もつ煮)
B-1 Grand Prix champion from Yamanashi: chicken innards — liver, gizzard, heart, and unfertilized egg — simmered in a sweet-salty tare until glossy and deeply rich. One of Japan's great kept secrets.
June 25, 2026
Mojiko Yaki-Curry (門司港焼きカレー)
Someone cracked an egg onto curry rice, buried it in cheese, and baked the whole thing — and it's so much better than normal curry it feels almost unfair. In a port town frozen in 1910, this is the only correct thing to order.
June 25, 2026
Morioka Reimen (盛岡冷麺)
Morioka's cold noodles: gloriously chewy, translucent, sitting in an icy beef broth with kimchi and a slice of watermelon. Yes, watermelon. It works. Trust the noodle.
June 25, 2026
Okinawa Soba (沖縄そば)
It's called soba. It's made with wheat. The broth is pork and bonito. The toppings are braised pork belly. It follows none of the rules and it is one of the best noodle soups in Japan.
June 25, 2026
Shizuoka Oden (静岡おでん)
Black broth, beef tendons, skewered everything, finished with dried sardine powder and aonori. Shizuoka's oden looks intimidating, tastes like the deepest umami you've ever encountered, and costs about 100 yen per stick.
June 25, 2026
Tebasaki (手羽先)
Nagoya's famous chicken wings: fried twice until they shatter, then glazed with sweet soy and coated in sesame and black pepper. You will eat ten before you realize you're doing it.
June 25, 2026
Toruko Raisu (トルコライス)
A tonkatsu, a pile of pilaf, and a heap of spaghetti walk onto one plate. This is not a joke. This is Nagasaki's proudest yōshoku creation, and it is magnificent.
June 25, 2026
Tsu Gyoza (津ぎょうざ)
Japan's biggest gyoza. Fifteen centimeters across. Fried until the skin shatters. One piece is a meal. Tsu, Mie Prefecture's finest contribution to the ongoing debate about what gyoza can be.
June 25, 2026
Curry Pan (カレーパン)
Japanese curry sealed inside dough, breaded, and deep-fried until shatteringly crisp. The savory bakery hero — crunchy outside, molten-spicy inside, and dangerously easy to eat two of.
June 20, 2026
Daifuku (大福)
A pillowy ball of soft, chewy mochi wrapped around sweet red bean paste — and sometimes a whole strawberry. Soft, stretchy, and quietly addictive: the essential Japanese mochi sweet.
June 20, 2026
Dango (団子)
Chewy little rice-flour balls on a skewer, glazed with sweet-savory soy or topped with red bean. The everyday teatime dumpling — cheap, chewy, and seasonally beloved across Japan.
June 20, 2026
Dorayaki (どら焼き)
Two fluffy honey-pancakes sandwiching sweet red bean paste. Doraemon's favorite food, a teatime classic, and the most foolproof introduction to Japanese sweets there is.
June 20, 2026
Gyoza (餃子)
Pan-fried dumplings with a crispy bottom and a juicy pork-and-cabbage filling, dunked in vinegar-soy-chili. The ultimate ramen sidekick, the izakaya staple, and the snack nobody can stop eating.
June 20, 2026
Gyudon (牛丼)
Thin-sliced beef and onion simmered in sweet-savory broth, piled over a bowl of hot rice. Fast, cheap, served in minutes, open all night — the working hero of the Japanese diet, and shockingly good.
June 20, 2026
Hamburg Steak (ハンバーグ)
A juicy seasoned beef-and-pork patty — no bun — served on a plate with rice and a glossy demi-glace or sauce. Japan's beloved yoshoku comfort dish, and a kid's-menu hero adults never outgrow.
June 20, 2026
Kakigori (かき氷)
Mountains of fluffy shaved ice drenched in syrup — and at the high end, snow-soft ice with real fruit and condensed milk. Japan's summer survival dessert, far beyond a snow cone.
June 20, 2026
Katsu Curry (カツカレー)
A crispy pork cutlet sitting on rice, drowned in thick, glossy Japanese curry. Two comfort-food titans on one plate — and the single most satisfying ¥1000 lunch in the country.
June 20, 2026
Katsudon (カツ丼)
A crispy pork cutlet simmered with onion and egg in sweet-savory broth, draped over a bowl of hot rice. Comfort food with a fried-and-fluffy double punch — and the meal Japan eats to win.
June 20, 2026
Matcha Parfait (抹茶パフェ)
A towering glass of matcha ice cream, soft serve, anko, shiratama mochi and crunchy cornflakes — Japan's most theatrical dessert, and a one-way ticket to matcha obsession.
June 20, 2026
Melonpan (メロンパン)
A soft, fluffy bun under a crisp, sweet, cookie-crust shell scored like a melon. There's usually no melon in it — just one of Japan's most beloved bakery treats, best warm and crackly.
June 20, 2026
Miso Soup (味噌汁)
Fermented soybean paste dissolved in dashi, with tofu and seaweed bobbing inside — the warm, savory, umami-rich bowl that anchors nearly every Japanese meal. Quiet, ancient, and essential.
June 20, 2026
Nikuman (肉まん)
A fluffy steamed white bun stuffed with juicy seasoned pork — pulled hot from the convenience-store steamer on a cold day. Cheap, warming, and one of winter's small perfect pleasures.
June 20, 2026
Onigiri (おにぎり)
A triangle of rice with a savory surprise in the middle, wrapped in crisp seaweed. The perfect portable snack, the soul of the bento, and the single best ¥150 you can spend in a convenience store.
June 20, 2026
Oyakodon (親子丼)
Chicken and egg simmered together in sweet-savory dashi and poured, silky and barely-set, over rice. Its name literally means 'parent-and-child bowl' — cozy, cheap, and quietly perfect.
June 20, 2026
Ramen (ラーメン)
A bowl of noodles in soup — and somehow one of the most obsessed-over foods on the planet. Shoyu, miso, shio, tonkotsu: here's how to read a ramen menu and slurp like you mean it.
June 20, 2026
Soba (そば)
Nutty buckwheat noodles, served ice-cold with a dipping sauce or hot in broth — the lean, earthy, grown-up noodle Japan has eaten for centuries. Slurping is mandatory; so is the noodle-water finale.
June 20, 2026
Soft Cream (ソフトクリーム)
Japan's beloved soft serve — silky, towering swirls in flavors you won't find anywhere else, often made with famous local milk or regional specialties. A travel snack and a regional treasure hunt.
June 20, 2026
Sushi (寿司)
Vinegared rice, a slice of something perfect on top, and decades of obsession behind every piece. Forget the conveyor-belt clichés — real sushi is one of the great food experiences on earth, and it's easier to enjoy than you think.
June 20, 2026
Taiyaki (たい焼き)
A fish-shaped cake, crisp at the edges and fluffy inside, stuffed with sweet red bean paste. Japan's most charming street snack — warm in your hand on a cold day, and impossible not to smile at.
June 20, 2026
Tendon (天丼)
Crispy tempura — prawns, vegetables — dunked in a sweet-savory glaze and piled over rice so the sauce soaks in. Tempura's greedy, glorious rice-bowl form, and a steal at lunch.
June 20, 2026
Udon (うどん)
Thick, chewy, white wheat noodles in a clean dashi broth — the cozy, cheap, deeply satisfying bowl Japan reaches for when it wants comfort. Sanuki udon will ruin you for all other noodles.
June 20, 2026
Unagi (うなぎ)
Freshwater eel, butterflied, grilled over charcoal, and lacquered in a sweet-savory glaze until it's smoky, rich, and falling apart. A splurge worth every yen — and Japan's favorite way to survive the summer.
June 20, 2026
Yakiniku (焼肉)
Japanese barbecue: bite-sized cuts of beef you grill yourself over fire at the table, dunk in sauce, and eat the second they're done. Social, smoky, customizable, and one of the best nights out you can have.
June 20, 2026
Yakitori (焼き鳥)
Bite-sized skewers of chicken grilled over blazing charcoal, seasoned with just salt or a sweet-savory tare. The beating heart of the izakaya, smoke and beer included. Nose-to-tail, and all of it good.
June 20, 2026
Gyutan (牛タン)
Thick-cut grilled beef tongue, charcoal-charred, snappy and rich — served with barley rice and oxtail soup. Sendai turned an overlooked cut into a destination. Trust the tongue.
June 15, 2026
Hakata Ramen (博多ラーメン)
Milky pork-bone broth, hair-thin straight noodles, and a refill system that lets you keep the party going. Fukuoka's tonkotsu ramen runs on its own vocabulary — learn three words and you're in.
June 15, 2026
Kushikatsu (串カツ)
Skewered, panko-fried everything, dunked in a shared vat of sauce — with one sacred, non-negotiable rule that will get you glared at if you break it. Welcome to Osaka's rowdiest snack.
June 15, 2026
Taco Rice (タコライス)
Taco fillings piled on rice instead of in a shell — seasoned beef, lettuce, tomato, cheese, salsa. Born next to a US base in Okinawa, it's the most deliciously unlikely fusion in Japan.
June 15, 2026
Wanko Soba (わんこそば)
Tiny bowls of soba refilled the instant you empty them, a server cheering you on, and only one way to make it stop. Iwate turned dinner into a sport — and it's the most fun you'll have eating.
June 15, 2026
Buri no Teriyaki (ブリの照り焼き)
Fatty winter yellowtail lacquered in sweet soy until it shines. This is teriyaki the way Japan actually means it — not a bottled sauce, but a glossy glaze on a rich, seasonal fish.
July 24, 2024
Hiroshima-style Okonomiyaki (広島風お好み焼き)
Not mixed — layered. A towering stack of crêpe, a mountain of cabbage, pork, a nest of noodles, and an egg, all pressed into one glorious skyscraper. And do NOT call it Hiroshima-yaki.
July 24, 2024
Miso Katsu (味噌カツ)
Take a perfect crispy tonkatsu and drown it in deep, dark, sweet-savory Nagoya miso. Heresy to some. Religion in Nagoya. Pick a side.
July 24, 2024
Okonomiyaki (お好み焼き)
'Grill what you like' — a sizzling cabbage-packed pancake you build, cook, and drown in sauce and mayo. Osaka mixes it, Hiroshima layers it, and both will defend their honor.
July 23, 2024
Nikujaga (肉じゃが)
Meat and potatoes simmered in sweet soy until they melt — the dish Japan means when it says 'the taste of home.' Allegedly invented because an admiral missed British beef stew.
July 21, 2024
Odawara Oden (小田原おでん)
Most oden is about the broth. This one is about the fish cakes — thirteen master kamaboko makers in one pot — and it ditches the mustard for tangy plum miso. Get off the Shinkansen for it.
July 21, 2024
Ota Yakisoba (太田焼きそば)
Noodles so thick they look like udon, slicked in a dark, intense sauce, with barely any toppings to get in the way. A factory town's honest, no-frills yakisoba — and it's proud of it.
July 21, 2024
Tempura (天ぷら)
Batter so light it's almost not there, around an ingredient cooked to its peak. It looks like the simplest thing in the world. It's one of the hardest to do perfectly.
July 21, 2024
Zeri Fry (ゼリーフライ)
It's not jelly. It's not even really 'fry.' It's a coin-shaped okara-and-potato patty named after old money — and it's one of the weirdest, most lovable snacks in Japan.
July 21, 2024
Miso Potato (みそポテト)
Fluffy fried potato on a stick, drowned in sweet miso. It's a farmer's snack from the Chichibu mountains, and it's the kind of simple that ruins you for fancy food.
July 20, 2024
Sakana no Kabuto-ni (魚の兜煮)
A whole fish head simmered in soy and mirin until it glistens like lacquer. It looks intimidating. It's secretly the best, richest, most prized part of the fish.
July 20, 2024
Sukiyaki (すき焼き)
Marbled wagyu in a sweet-savory broth, swiped through cold raw egg. The hot pot Japan saves for the moments that matter — birthdays, New Year, good news.
July 20, 2024
Sashimi (刺身)
Raw fish, sliced with a blade and a lifetime of skill, served with nothing to hide behind. The purest, most honest, most quietly thrilling thing in all of Japanese cuisine.
July 18, 2024
Tsukishima Monjayaki (月島もんじゃ焼き)
It looks like a mess. It is, gloriously, a mess. Tokyo's runny griddle-pancake is less a dish than a contact sport — and one street has dozens of shops to prove it.
July 18, 2024
Waraji Katsudon (わらじカツ丼)
Two pork cutlets so big they're named after straw sandals, hanging off the bowl on every side. Chichibu's answer to the question nobody asked: what if katsudon, but more?
July 18, 2024
Omurice (オムライス)
A silky egg blanket over ketchup rice — the most nostalgic plate in Japan. Born in 1925 for a customer with a weak stomach, now beloved by everyone with a heart.
July 17, 2024
Obihiro Butadon (帯広豚丼)
Thick slabs of pork, charred over flame and glazed in sweet soy, fanned over rice. Hokkaido's smoky, glossy, gloriously simple pride — born in Obihiro in the 1930s.
July 16, 2024
Curry Rice (カレーライス)
Not Indian. Not British. Thoroughly, lovingly Japanese — thick, sweet-savory, mild, and the smell of home on a Friday night. The nation's true comfort food.
July 14, 2024
Hanetsuki Gyoza (羽根つき餃子)
Gyoza with a crispy lace 'wing' connecting them all in one golden sheet. A tiny Tokyo upgrade that made an already-perfect dumpling impossible to stop eating.
July 14, 2024
Shabu-shabu (しゃぶしゃぶ)
Swish a paper-thin slice of beef through hot broth for three seconds and your whole night changes. Japan's most elegant hot pot, where doing less is the entire point.
July 14, 2024
Bolga Rice (ボルガライス)
Curry rice. Topped with omurice. Topped with a pork cutlet. Drowned in demi-glace. Fukui built a triple-decker monument to indulgence — and nobody knows where the name came from.
July 13, 2024
Iburi Gakko Cheese (いぶりがっこチーズ)
Smoke-cured daikon pickle, crunchy and savory, topped with cool cream cheese. Akita's snowbound tradition meets dairy and becomes the izakaya snack you can't stop eating.
July 13, 2024
Karaage (からあげ)
Japan's fried chicken: crackling-crisp outside, gushing-juicy inside, marinated in soy and ginger and garlic. The bento hero, the izakaya MVP, the snack worth fighting over.
July 13, 2024
Ogura Toast (小倉トースト)
Thick buttered toast piled with sweet red bean paste. It sounds wrong. It is gloriously, sweet-salty right — and it's the cornerstone of Nagoya's legendary café mornings.
July 13, 2024
Ramen Jiro (ラーメン二郎)
A roaring mountain of noodles, fat, garlic and pork that broke the rules of ramen and built a cult. Not a meal — a rite of passage. Learn the secret call before you go in.
July 13, 2024
Tonkatsu (トンカツ)
The crunch you can hear across the room. Japan borrowed a French cutlet, deep-fried it into something better — and here's how to order it like you belong.
July 13, 2024
Hiyashi Niku Soba (冷やし肉そば)
Ice-cold soba under a pile of savory simmered meat in chilled soy-dashi. Yamagata's genius answer to brutal summer heat — cold, slurpable, and quietly addictive.
July 12, 2024
Takoyaki (たこやき)
Osaka's molten-hot octopus balls — the one street food everyone slightly gets wrong. Here's the glorious truth, and exactly what to say at the stall.
July 12, 2024
Yakimanju (やきまんじゅう)
Fluffy fermented dough skewered, charcoal-grilled, and painted with sweet-savory miso until it caramelizes. Gunma's festival soul food — sticky-fingered, smoky, unforgettable.
July 12, 2024
Yakisoba (やきそば)
Griddle-fried noodles slicked in sweet-savory sauce, the smell that defines a Japanese summer festival. Cheap, fast, joyful — and secretly one of the country's great comfort foods.
July 12, 2024
Famichiki (ファミチキ)
FamilyMart's hot-case fried chicken, and Japan's most democratic comfort food. Cheap, crispy, gushing-juicy, available 24/7 on every corner. Do not sleep on konbini chicken.
July 11, 2024
Ryugasaki Croquettes (竜ケ崎コロッケ)
A small-town croquette so good it won a national contest. The star? A rice-flour cream croquette oozing maitake and béchamel. Underdog energy, championship flavor.
July 11, 2024