Okinawan Cuisine — Champuru Culture and Longevity Foods
Okinawa Prefecture, Japan — Ryukyu Kingdom culinary tradition
Okinawan cuisine (Ryukyuan cuisine in its classical form) stands apart from mainland Japanese food in profound ways: heavy use of pork (every part — rafute braised belly, mimiga pig ear, tebichi trotters, churaumi sea pork); abundant use of bitter gourd (goya); distinctive stir-fry culture (champuru, meaning 'mixed together'); minimal use of raw fish compared to mainland Japan; heavy use of tofu (including island tofu, shimadofu, which is firmer and denser than mainland varieties); turmeric (ukon) as daily health tonic; and the traditional claim that Okinawa's dietary practices contribute to the world's highest longevity rates (though modern Okinawa has diverged from this tradition). The cuisine reflects 500 years as the Ryukyu Kingdom — a regional trading hub absorbing Chinese, Southeast Asian, and Japanese influences simultaneously.