Provenance Technique Library

Japan (Meiji period 1868-1912) — deliberate Western cuisine adoption and transformation Techniques

1 technique from Japan (Meiji period 1868-1912) — deliberate Western cuisine adoption and transformation cuisine

Clear filters
1 result
Japan (Meiji period 1868-1912) — deliberate Western cuisine adoption and transformation
Yoshoku Japanese Western Fusion History
Japan (Meiji period 1868-1912) — deliberate Western cuisine adoption and transformation
Yoshoku (洋食, Western food) is Japan's unique fusion cuisine category — Western dishes transformed by Japanese sensibility during the Meiji era modernization (1868-1912) when Japan intentionally adopted Western culture. Iconic yoshoku dishes: hayashi raisu (hashed beef on rice, roux-based), omurice (omelette-wrapped fried rice), ebi furai (deep-fried breaded shrimp), korokke (croquette), and hambaagu (Japanese hamburger steak). These dishes bear Western names and origins but are now uniquely Japanese — korokke is completely different from French croquette; hambaagu served on a sizzling plate with demi-glace is unrecognizable from an American hamburger.
Food Culture