Japanese Itameshi: Italian-Japanese Fusion Cuisine and the Pasta Counter Revolution
Japan — 1980s-1990s Tokyo and Osaka restaurant culture
Itameshi — Italian food in Japanese, a portmanteau of 'Italia' and 'meshi' — describes the Japanese interpretation of Italian cuisine that emerged during the economic boom years of the 1980s and produced a distinctly Japanese cooking style that borrowed Italian technique and structure while substituting or augmenting with Japanese ingredients and sensibility. Where yoshoku (Meiji-era Western food) adapted Western food through a 19th-century lens, itameshi engaged with contemporary Italian restaurant culture at the height of Japan's economic confidence — importing actual Italian techniques (pasta-making, sautéing, reduction saucing), Italian ingredients (olive oil, parmesan, prosciutto, San Marzano tomatoes), and Italian dining formats (open kitchens, counter seating, casual elegance). The result was a Japanese Italian cuisine that was neither authentically Italian nor purely Japanese but a genuine creative synthesis. The canonical itameshi dishes that emerged from this period: mentaiko pasta (pasta + cream + mentaiko roe + nori — the most celebrated), uni pasta (sea urchin + butter + pasta + nori), ikura pasta (salmon roe + butter + cream + pasta), wafu pasta (Japanese-style pasta using mushrooms, burdock, soy sauce, butter), peperoncino with shiso and myoga. The common element is Japanese ingredients — seafood, roe, mushrooms, aromatic herbs — meeting Italian technique (pasta cooking, emulsification, fond development). Many contemporary Japanese-Italian restaurants (most famously in Tokyo's Roppongi and Shibuya districts) now represent a mature, distinctive cuisine in their own right.