Japanese Karē Raisu: Curry Rice and the Meiji-Era Western Import That Became Native
Nationwide Japan, introduced via British-Indian curry through Meiji-era military and naval cuisine
Japanese curry (karē raisu) represents one of the world's most successful culinary adaptations—a British-Indian curry introduced to Japan in the Meiji era through Royal Navy food rations that was so thoroughly transformed over 150 years that it now constitutes a genuinely distinct culinary tradition. The key differentiation from Indian or British curry is the roux base: Japanese curry uses wheat flour cooked in fat as the thickener, creating a thick, smooth, mildly sweet and savory sauce more reminiscent of a French velouté than any South Asian preparation. The flavor profile is deliberately mild, featuring apple and honey alongside onion, carrot, and potato—the vegetables are the starring ingredients rather than the protein. The curry roux cube system (S&B, Vermont, Java, Golden brands) democratized Japanese curry through industrial production, and even professional kitchens often incorporate a block of commercial roux into a scratch preparation for consistency. Regional variations are significant: Kanazawa curry is darker and more concentrated, served with shredded cabbage; Nagoya curry is drier; Yokosuka navy curry is served with a glass of milk. For hospitality professionals, Japanese curry represents an excellent case study in how immigrant ingredients become native traditions through generational transformation.