Ochazuke Green Tea Over Rice Comfort Preparation
Japan (nationwide; Kyoto omakase and ryokan as high-end restaurant context; home version universal)
Ochazuke (お茶漬け, 'tea-soaked') is Japan's most intimate comfort food — hot green tea poured over a bowl of white rice with light toppings, served as a late-night snack, a gentle breakfast, or the ceremonial meal-ending gesture at a Kyoto ryokan or omakase restaurant. The preparation's genius is in its transitional character: it is simultaneously rice and soup, warm and refreshing, filling and light — designed to use leftover rice, to quiet appetite without overloading the stomach, or to cleanse the palate after a long meal. Standard ochazuke toppings: umeboshi (pickled plum), salt-grilled salmon flaked into pieces, nori toasted and crumbled, wasabi, pickled vegetables, or eel (unagi). The liquid can be hot green tea (sencha the most common), hojicha (roasted tea), or simply dashi — the latter (called dashi-chazuke) being the version served at high-end restaurants where it functions as a shime (closing) course. At the Kyoto tradition of omotenashi (sincere hospitality), offering ochazuke was historically a signal that a guest should leave — the phrase 'Banzai, ochazuke ga oishii' ('Well, the ochazuke looks delicious') is a Kyoto cultural idiom for hinting a visitor's visit has run its length. Commercial ochazuke packets (Nagatanien brand) are a standard pantry staple.