Shrimp-Flavoured Snacks — Kappa Ebisen Culture
Japan — Kappa Ebisen from Calbee 1964; Japanese convenience store food culture from 1970s
Japanese snack culture (okashi, おかし) represents a distinct commercial food category that has developed sophisticated products over decades — and among these, seafood-flavoured crunchy snacks represent a uniquely Japanese contribution to global snack food. Kappa Ebisen (Calbee, introduced 1964) — shrimp-flavoured corn puff snacks — became one of Japan's most iconic foods, famous for the phrase 'yamitsuki ni naru' ('addictively delicious') and the impossible-to-stop-eating phenomenon. These products, along with Tako-no-hana (dried octopus snack), Senbei (rice crackers), and Ika-geso (dried squid strips) define the Japanese salty snack tradition that differs fundamentally from Western crisps/chips. The use of actual seafood flavouring (shrimp extract, dried fish extracts) rather than artificial flavouring gives Japanese snacks a genuine umami dimension absent from most Western equivalents. Japanese convenience store (konbini) snack culture — the extraordinary range of onigiri, premium sandwiches, hot foods, and packaged sweets — represents a global benchmark for convenience food quality.