Japanese Shōjin Kaiseki: Vegan Temple Cuisine's Complete Structure
Kyoto (Daitokuji and Tofukuji temples), Koya-san (Shingon Buddhism), nationwide Buddhist temples
Shōjin ryōri (Buddhist vegetarian cuisine—'shōjin' means devotion/spiritual practice) is Japan's most systematically developed vegan culinary tradition, representing over 800 years of continuous practice since Chinese Zen Buddhist dietary principles were introduced in the Kamakura period. Unlike contemporary vegan cooking that emerged from ethical concerns, shōjin ryōri developed as a religious practice where the absence of animal products reflects the Buddhist precept against taking life—a philosophical position that shapes not just ingredient selection but technique, portion, and service. The complete shōjin kaiseki structure: a sequence of courses built entirely from plant and fungus sources, using konbu and shiitake dashi in place of katsuobushi, and avoiding not only meat and fish but also the five pungent vegetables (goshinku—onion, garlic, chives, leeks, shallots) because their strong flavors were considered incompatible with meditation practice. This last restriction creates the most significant challenge for modern applications: shōjin ryōri without alliums requires alternative flavor development through careful toasting, fermenting, and layering of mild vegetables and umami-rich fungi and seaweed. Kōya-san's shōjin ryōri has its own character—the high altitude (850m) mountain location, its history as a sacred Shingon Buddhism site, and the cold climate create a cuisine with more preserved foods, more mushroom emphasis, and a specific relationship with kōya-dōfu (freeze-dried tofu developed in the mountain cold).