Japanese Yōshoku: Western-Influenced Japanese Cuisine and Its Canon
Japan — Meiji era (1868–1912) Westernisation period, consolidated in Showa era
Yōshoku (洋食, 'Western food') refers to a specific category of Japanese cuisine — not actual Western food, but a uniquely Japanese interpretation of Western dishes developed during the Meiji and Taisho eras as Japan rapidly modernised and adopted Western cultural elements. Unlike the fusion cuisines of the 20th century, yōshoku is now a distinct national culinary tradition approximately 150 years old, with its own restaurants (yōshoku-ya), techniques, and canon of dishes. The canonical yōshoku dishes include: omurice (fried rice wrapped in a thin egg omelette, topped with ketchup); hayashi rice (a rich dark beef-and-onion stew based loosely on hachée served over rice); hamburg steak (hambāgu — a pan-fried ground beef patty served with demi-glace sauce and rice, not in a bun); korokke (croquettes — mashed potato and meat patties breaded in panko and deep-fried); doria (rice gratin); and napolitan spaghetti (pasta in ketchup sauce with sausage and peppers). These dishes entered Japanese food culture through Meiji-era Western hotel restaurants and were adapted to Japanese palates, ingredient availability, and tableware conventions. The resulting cuisine has a specifically Japanese sweetness and softness that distinguishes it from the Western originals.