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Japan — Meiji period (1868–1912); cultural transformation accelerating through 1880s–1910s Techniques

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Japan — Meiji period (1868–1912); cultural transformation accelerating through 1880s–1910s
Meiji-Era Western Cooking Adoption and Bunmei Kaika
Japan — Meiji period (1868–1912); cultural transformation accelerating through 1880s–1910s
The Meiji Restoration of 1868 triggered the most dramatic dietary disruption in Japanese history: within a generation, a society that had officially prohibited meat consumption for over 1,200 years (from the Emperor Tenmu's Buddhist-influenced edict of 675 CE) officially embraced beef, pork, dairy, and Western cooking under the banner of bunmei kaika — 'civilisation and enlightenment.' When Emperor Meiji publicly consumed beef on New Year's Day 1873, he performed a deliberate symbolic act: Western dietary habits were equated with modernity, military strength, and national progress. The government promoted yoshoku (Western-style food) as essential to national development — the reasoning being that European soldiers and workers were physically larger because they ate meat. The transformation that followed was profound and permanent. Gyuunabeya (beef hot pot restaurants) proliferated in Tokyo; sukiyaki emerged from this tradition. Military ration culture systematised Western-influenced mass catering. Cooking schools taught omelette, croquette, and curry. The first dedicated beef restaurant in Tokyo's Ginza opened in 1869 — and within years, Tokyo had hundreds. Western-trained chefs returning from France and Germany brought classical techniques that merged with Japanese aesthetics to produce yoshoku: omurice, hayashi rice, kare raisu (curry rice), hambagu, Naporitan spaghetti, korokke (croquettes), and ebi furai. These dishes, now considered comfort food staples, represent a historical negotiation between Japanese culinary identity and forced Westernisation — fully absorbed, reimagined, and now entirely Japanese.
Japanese Food History and Culture