Yakuzen Medicinal Food Japanese Kampo Kitchen
Japan — yakuzen adapted from Chinese Kampo medicine; formalized in medieval Japanese court cuisine
Yakuzen (薬膳, medicinal meal) is the Japanese adaptation of Chinese traditional medicine's food-as-medicine philosophy (Kampo) — the practice of creating meals with specific seasonal and constitutional health properties. Unlike clinical Kampo herb prescriptions, yakuzen is cooking: using ingredients with known warming, cooling, tonifying, or dispersing properties to create balance. Summer yakuzen uses cooling foods (cucumber, daikon, tofu); winter uses warming (ginger, black sesame, root vegetables). Contemporary yakuzen practitioners include both traditional Kampo-trained chefs and modern restaurant menus in Japan's ryokan (hot spring inns) where seasonal therapeutic menus are offered.