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Japan — Meiji-era (1868-1912) Western influence, Tokyo and Yokohama primary development Techniques

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Japan — Meiji-era (1868-1912) Western influence, Tokyo and Yokohama primary development
Japanese Yōshoku Yoshoku Deep Dive: Omuraisu, Hambagu, and the Western-Japanese Fusion Kitchen
Japan — Meiji-era (1868-1912) Western influence, Tokyo and Yokohama primary development
Yoshoku — Western-style Japanese cooking — represents a distinct culinary category that is neither Western nor purely Japanese but a synthesis developed during the Meiji period when Japan's forced opening to Western trade brought new ingredients, cooking methods, and cultural reference points. Unlike washoku (traditional Japanese cooking) or chuka (Chinese-influenced cooking), yoshoku openly embraces its foreign origins while completely transforming the source material through Japanese sensibility. The canonical yoshoku dishes — omuraisu (omelette rice), hambagu (Japanese hamburger steak), hayashi raisu (hashed beef rice), korokke (croquettes), menbou (cream stew) — share several characteristics: they are served on Western plates rather than Japanese ceramics; they use ketchup or demi-glace rather than soy or miso as primary saucing; they prioritise comfort and richness over the restrained elegance of washoku; and they occupy a nostalgic register in Japanese food culture that connects to home cooking, family diners (shokudo), and the Western-facing restaurants (yōshoku-ya) that served as bridges between Meiji modernisation and everyday eating. Omuraisu — fried rice wrapped in a thin omelette, finished with ketchup or demi-glace — represents yoshoku's most iconic expression. The Taimeiken version (Tokyo) with a runny omelette cut to reveal liquid egg interior has become the benchmark for contemporary omuraisu. Hambagu differs from Western hamburger patties by using a mixture of beef and pork, breadcrumbs soaked in milk (creating tenderness), and a sauce of demi-glace or Japanese tomato ketchup with Worcestershire — the result is softer, sweeter, and more umami-rich than a Western patty.
Food Culture and Tradition