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Japan — izakaya chain expansion from 1970s; tori-izakaya (chicken-focused) as the dominant format Techniques

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Japan — izakaya chain expansion from 1970s; tori-izakaya (chicken-focused) as the dominant format
Japanese Izakaya Chain Culture and Tori-Izakaya Yakitori Concepts
Japan — izakaya chain expansion from 1970s; tori-izakaya (chicken-focused) as the dominant format
Japan's izakaya chain culture — large-scale restaurant chains operating in the casual dining / gastropub space — represents one of Japan's most significant food industry developments and a major dimension of everyday Japanese eating culture. The major chain operators (Watami, Torikizoku, Koshitsuizakaya, Tsubohachi, Shirokiya) operate thousands of locations across Japan and collectively serve millions of diners weekly. Understanding chain izakaya culture is important for understanding everyday Japanese food: these are the restaurants where most Japanese people actually eat the most often, not the high-end kaiseki or specialty restaurants that dominate food media coverage. Torikizoku (鳥貴族) is the most interesting chain case study: it is a single-product-category restaurant (yakitori and chicken-focused dishes only) with a fixed single price point for all items — every skewer and side dish at the same price regardless of ingredient. This radical simplicity of concept, combined with excellent quality control for chicken sourcing and grilling technique, has made it one of Japan's most successful restaurant concepts. The tori-izakaya format (chicken izakaya) includes: Torikizoku, Watami's tori concept, and hundreds of smaller regional chains. The yakitori served includes both the standard category items (negima, momo, kawa, tsukune, sunagimo) and the premium regional chicken varieties (Nagoya Cochin, Satsuma Jidori, Hinai-Jidori) at restaurants committed to quality sourcing.
Food Culture and Tradition