Japanese Kenchinjiru: Buddhist Root Vegetable Soup and the Kamakura Temple Tradition
Japan — Kencho-ji Temple, Kamakura, Kanagawa Prefecture; medieval Zen tradition
Kenchinjiru is a hearty Japanese vegetable soup with a specific origin story: it was purportedly created by the chef monks of Kencho-ji temple in Kamakura during the Kamakura period (1185-1333), using broken tofu and root vegetables simmered in a kombu dashi — a temple cuisine (shojin ryori) soup that eventually spread beyond Buddhist practice to become a widely consumed cold-weather preparation throughout Japan. The name derives from Kencho-ji (建長寺) itself, the 700-year-old Zen temple still active in Kamakura. The defining characteristics: no meat, no fish, no animal products (shojin philosophy); the broken tofu is fried in sesame oil first (giving the soup its distinctive depth), then root vegetables (gobo, lotus root, carrot, daikon) and konnyaku are sautéed together in the same oil before being simmered in kombu dashi; the finishing seasoning is soy sauce and sake. The technique of frying the tofu and then the vegetables in sesame oil before adding the dashi is the key distinction from ordinary vegetable soup: the oil creates roasted, caramelised notes on each element that transform the flavour from simple vegetable broth to something with the depth usually associated with meat-based stocks. Kenchinjiru is consumed throughout Japan in winter as a warming vegetable soup, often at Shinto shrine festivals and year-end celebrations. It is frequently compared to tonjiru (pork belly and root vegetable miso soup) — the two soups share nearly identical vegetable ingredients and similar warming character, but kenchinjiru uses clear dashi rather than miso and contains no meat, making it suitable for shojin cooking contexts.