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Japan — Tokyo's Ginza and Ueno district as yoshoku origin (Meiji period); now nationwide genre Techniques

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Japan — Tokyo's Ginza and Ueno district as yoshoku origin (Meiji period); now nationwide genre
Omurice Yoshoku and Western-Japanese Fusion History
Japan — Tokyo's Ginza and Ueno district as yoshoku origin (Meiji period); now nationwide genre
Yoshoku (洋食, Western food) is the uniquely Japanese genre of Western-influenced dishes transformed into something distinctly and irreducibly Japanese — a culinary category that emerged during the Meiji period (1868–1912) when Japan opened to Western influence after 250 years of isolation. The paradox of yoshoku is that these dishes — omurice (tomato rice in an omelette), hambagu (Japanese hamburger steak with demi-glace), napolitan spaghetti (ketchup-fried noodles), hayashi raisu (hashed beef over rice), cream korokke (cream croquettes) — are not Western food but a Japanese imagining of Western food filtered through the Meiji era's incomplete access to Western ingredients and technique, then refined over 150 years into something with its own internal logic and rules. Omurice specifically is believed to have originated at Renga-tei restaurant in Ginza, Tokyo, circa 1900 — a thin omelette wrapping seasoned tomato ketchup fried rice (chahan), often with chicken, garnished with a ketchup drizzle. The contemporary evolution includes the fluffier omurice of Kichi Kichi in Kyoto — where a barely-set omelette is placed over the rice and sliced open tableside to cascade creamy egg over the filling, creating a viral video moment. The demi-glace sauce variant (omurice with brown demi-glace rather than ketchup) represents the restaurant version. Hayashi raisu uses hashed beef in a rich onion-wine-tomato demi-glace, its name possibly derived from a corruption of 'hashed rice' or from a Meiji period chef named Hayashi.
Regional Cuisine