Japan — teppan plates used from Meiji period; kappou counter dining format from Osaka Meiji/Taisho era; fusion of both into teppan kappou through mid-20th century
Teppan kappou represents the marriage of teppanyaki technique (cooking on a flat iron plate) with the kappou philosophy (counter dining where chef and guest interact in an intimate, improvisational format), creating a dining experience that is simultaneously performance, conversation, and meal. Unlike the theatrical Benihana-style teppanyaki popularised internationally (where performers execute knife tricks), authentic Japanese teppan kappou is characterised by quiet mastery, precise portion control, and a chef who communicates through cooking rather than performance — the work itself is the theatre. The iron plate (teppan) in kappou contexts is typically individual-sized or intimate group-scale (60–120cm), maintained at a consistent temperature through close attention and never overloaded. Protein preparation sequence on teppan follows strict temperature management: dense proteins (wagyu beef, lobster) to the hottest zone; fish and vegetables to mid-temperature zones; delicate items (eggs, sensitive seafood) to cooler perimeter zones. The fundamental teppan technique is abura-nuki (fat removal): regularly clearing accumulated rendered fat with folded paper, maintaining a lightly oiled rather than pooling-fat surface that would cause steaming rather than searing. Sauce finishing on the teppan involves the classic technique of mounting cold butter directly onto the hot plate beside protein, allowing it to melt and foam, then being used to baste in the pan's residual heat — a method that produces a sauce without direct flame control. The intimacy of teppan kappou allows for personalised pacing, spontaneous additions based on conversation about guest preferences, and visible sourcing communication — a chef may present a whole matsutake mushroom for guest inspection before slicing it onto the plate.
Intense Maillard sear on protein; clean rendered fat notes from wagyu; subtle iron mineral undertone from teppan surface; char-edged vegetables; egg-coated fried rice with wok-hei equivalent
{"Teppan kappou: technical mastery + intimate counter conversation — work itself is theatre, not performance tricks","Temperature zoning on teppan: dense proteins to hottest zones; fish/vegetables to mid; delicate to cooler perimeter","Abura-nuki (fat removal) with folded paper: prevents pooling fat and maintains searing vs steaming surface","Cold butter mounting on hot plate beside protein: produces foam-basted sauce without direct flame control","Visible sourcing communication: whole ingredients presented to guest before preparation — integrity and provenance transparency"}
{"Wagyu on teppan: start fat-side down to render internal fat, then sear faces — self-basting in its own rendered fat","Garlic chips (usugiri ninniku): slice paper-thin, fry in 150°C teppan oil section until golden — add crispy garlic flavour without burning","Shio (salt) timing: add coarse flake salt to wagyu after searing, not before — draws moisture if added early","Teppan fried rice (yakimeshi): maximally hot zone, constant motion, eggs added before rice to coat grains individually","Post-service teppan cleaning: fine mesh pad (kinpika) with warm water immediately while still hot removes seasoning without stripping the surface"}
{"Overloading teppan drops surface temperature precipitously — reduces to 170°C and proteins steam rather than sear","Neglecting abura-nuki allows accumulated fat to create smoke and bitter off-flavours in subsequent items","Moving proteins too frequently interrupts Maillard crust development — patience at teppan is essential","Adding soy sauce too early onto teppan before protein has crusted — sugar in shoyu burns to bitter carbon","Forgetting that teppan surfaces have hot spots — rotating proteins within the zone compensates for uneven heat distribution"}
Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art — Shizuo Tsuji; Teppanyaki Craft — various Japanese culinary training sources