15 Traditional Japanese Foods and Drinks To Try on Your Next Trip

For domestic travelers in Japan, tourism and food tourism are synonymous. Every region has its meibutsu, or famous or signature local products, and sampling them is a quintessential part of any local trip. Plus, on an island nation built on a chain of volcanoes, it’s easy to always have “something from the ocean and something from the hills” in every meal, alongside the country’s favorite grain: rice.
Here are 15 classic Japanese dishes—well-known for their fresh, high-quality ingredients and visually pleasing presentation—that you won’t want to miss.
1. Sushi

Sushi is, of course, a must-try food in Japan; visit Tokyo, Kanazawa, and Hakodate for the best.
Japanese food fans know by now that sushi doesn’t just mean raw fish. In fact, the word “sushi” actually means vinegared rice, which is the vehicle for every succulent morsel, from fatty tuna belly (otoro) and broth-infused omelet (tamago) to fresh, palate-cleansing cucumber (kappa). If you skip the rice and go straight for the expertly sliced cuts of raw fish, that’s sashimi.
Sushi can be found all over Japan, but some of the most famous sushi locations are Tokyo (home of Edo-mae sushi), Kanazawa in Ishikawa Prefecture (for catches from the Sea of Japan), and Hakodate in Hokkaido. Want to try your hand at perfecting the art of sushi? Try a Japanese cooking class where you’ll learn from the experts and be able to bring your new-found skill back home to share with all your friends and family.
Related: 9 Quintessentially Japanese Dishes and Where To Eat Them in Tokyo
2. Soba

Nagano Prefecture serves up some of the best soba noodles year-round.
Soba, the popular buckwheat noodle, has a place in various sectors of Japanese food, from haute cuisine to rustic mountain village restaurants in Nagano Prefecture. It’s served cold with dipping sauce in summer and in steaming hot broth in winter.
Toppings vary by season, but zaru soba (plain noodles with a side of tsuyu dipping sauce) may be served with grated daikon, chopped scallions, and a dab of wasabi. Hot soba might come topped with a raw egg that silkily integrates into the noodles and broth; a slab of thin, golden-fried and seasoned tofu; or boiled or sauteed wild mountain vegetables.
3. Onigiri or omusubi

Onigiri might just be the best Japanese food for travelers on a budget.
A lunchbox staple, the onigiri or omusubi is Japan’s original portable snack. A rice ball as the base, it can be as simple as plain rice with a sprinkle of salt. More often, however, it’s wrapped in a sheet of nori seaweed, and holds a hidden treasure of fillings like umeboshi (pickled plums), tuna and mayonnaise, or flaked salmon, to name but a few.
Onigiri can be found in any convenience store for around ¥100, but the best ones are, of course, made with love by hand from leftover rice and tucked snugly into a bento box for a meal on the go.
Related: A Beginner’s Guide to Japanese Convenience Stores (and What To Buy There)
4. Okonomiyaki

If you're dining out at a Japanese restaurant in Osaka, be sure to try this dish.
Literally meaning “cook what you like,” this dish is especially fun to eat in restaurants, where you can mix and match toppings to your heart’s content before frying the whole thing on a tabletop griddle.
Most well-known in Osaka, the savory pancake is made from a thin wheat flour batter and then mixed with cabbage, vegetables, meat, and seafood. It is then fried to crispy perfection and topped with savory okonomiyaki sauce, drizzles of mayonnaise, and flakes of aonori seaweed. In Hiroshima, noodles are also often mixed into the batter.
5. Ramen

This noodle dish is popular across Japan—and the entire world.
Japanese chefs have made ramen their own since it came to Japan more than 100 years ago. Yes, ramen is actually originally a Chinese dish! Consisting of thin wheat noodles in a complex broth, a steaming bowl of ramen is the ultimate way to cap off a boozy night or a quick meal to slurp at the train station during a commute.
Sliced pork, bamboo shoots, and seaweed are common toppings, but every region has its own take: Try corn butter ramen in Hokkaido or scallions, fish cake, and a soy sauce base in Fukushima’s Kitakata ramen.
6. Bento

Bento boxes are a countrywide favorite lunch option.
In Japan, the humble lunchbox has been elevated to a work of art. Freshly made boxes are packed with a variety of food choices and sold in convenience stores, supermarkets, and restaurants nationwide, for just a few hundred yen.
Perhaps the most famous are ekiben, or lunchboxes sold in train stations. It’s customary to buy one before a long train journey, to be tucked into while enjoying the passing scenery. All major Shinkansen stations sell them, and they’re a popular way to sample local specialties even when passing through. In Yokohama, for example, the country’s largest Chinatown is represented by popular shumai (steamed dumplings stuffed with meat, seafood, and vegetables) bentos.
7. Tea

Much of Japan's tea is grown in Kyoto, Shizuoka, and Kagoshima.
Green tea has been the caffeinated beverage of choice in Japan for over a millennium—since the Buddhist monks Kukai and Saicho first brought it to the country from China. Today, it’s ubiquitous as a daily drink made by the pot and served at every meal, purchased in plastic bottles from vending machines on street corners, and drunk as part of the highly formal and choreographed tea ceremony.
By and large, Japanese people prefer to drink tea grown in Japan, and the country’s most famous tea regions are Kyoto, Shizuoka, and Kagoshima.
Related: Know Before You Go: Attending a Japanese Tea Ceremony
8. Shojin ryori

This isn't just a dish in Japan, but a style of cuisine found regularly at Buddhist temples.
While much of Japan eschews vegetarian food in favor of a diet liberally laced with fish and meat, shojin ryori, or Buddhist devotional cuisine, is still eaten by monks and nuns in temples all over Japan. This simple, highly seasonal food focuses on vegetables, tofu, and rice, and is usually served on red lacquer trays.
The prayerful and the peckish, the vegan and the voracious can sample a shojin meal at a number of temples that serve the public, such as Yakuoin on Mt. Takao in western Tokyo, or the temple complex on Mt. Koya in Wakayama Prefecture.
9. Kakigori

Need a sweet treat? This quintessential Japanese dessert is for you.
An essential summer treat, kakigori is a mound of shaved ice drizzled with sweet syrup. A mainstay of summer festivals, vendors sell a basic version with artificially flavored strawberry, lemon, or “Blue Hawaii” (a kind of fruit punch) for a few coins, but higher-end versions can be found at cafés and specialty shops, doused in house-made natural fruit syrups and sweetened condensed milk.
Try the yuzu-milk at Yuki Usagi in Tokyo or the shirokuma (polar bear) ice, with condensed milk and jewels of fruit and jelly at Tenmonkan Mujaki in Kagoshima.
10. Udon

Kagawa Prefecture is known for its special udon.
Udon is another noodle favorite across Japan. It is made with fat, slippery, wheat-based noodles that are satisfying to slurp. Like soba, udon can be served cold with dipping sauce or immersed in hot broth seasoned with soy sauce, mirin (cooking sake), and fish or seaweed stock.
A famous variety is Sanuki udon, from Kagawa Prefecture in Shikoku. Sanuki udon is characterized by flat, chewy noodles, broth-based on sardine stock, a ginger and scallion garnish, and often a twist of sudachi, a local lime-like citrus.
11. Goya champuru

Okinawa Prefecture has a unique culture all its own—and that includes its cuisine.
Japan’s southernmost prefecture, Okinawa, was the last to join the country and is just as close to Taiwan as mainland Japan. With a unique culture, Indigenous language, and distinct local ingredients, Okinawa’s cuisine is markedly different from the rest of the country.
One notable dish is goya champuru. “Champuru” is Okinawan for “mixed” and the stir fry’s star is goya, a bumpy, bitter gourd resembling the cucumber’s stepsister. The goya is thinly sliced and sauteed with firm tofu, bean sprouts, meat (often pork or Spam) or fish, egg, and other vegetables such as carrots.
12. Miso dengaku

You might know of miso soup, but visit Nagoya to try this fermented sauce.
Fermented foods are central to Japanese cuisine, and miso is no exception. A flavored paste made from fermented soybeans, salt, rice or barley, and culture, it’s used in everything from daily miso soup to a marinade for fish or meat; incorporated into salad dressing; or as a flavor base for ramen.
One way to eat it for a concentrated, punchy flavor is in dengaku, a thick, sweet, and savory glaze typically painted on grilled eggplant, tofu, and daikon. Though it can be made with any kind of miso, red miso from Nagoya is often used for dengaku.
13. Shochu

Forget sake—drink shochu in Kyushu.
Though sake, or Nihonshu in Japanese, is probably Japan’s most famous alcoholic export, shochu actually has higher sales domestically. A clear spirit of around 25 percent alcohol, shochu can be made from various ingredients. In Kyushu, where the majority of honkaku (authentic, singly distilled) shochu is made, the primary ingredient is sweet potatoes; other base ingredients include rice, barley, and brown sugar.
Versatile shochu can be drunk hot or cold; neat or on the rocks; as part of a cocktail (canned chuhai, shochu cocktails, are the most popular alcoholic beverages sold after beer); and as part of a meal.
14. Nabe

Head north to Akita Prefecture to sample this cold-weather comfort dish.
Nabe (hot pot) is the warm and comforting solution to a cold winter day. Nabe is a stew-filled ceramic pot that’s heated on a tabletop burner and served out in steaming ladlefuls while still boiling.
There are countless variations around the country, but in the frigid Tohoku region of northern Japan, winter experts in Akita Prefecture like their nabe with chicken, earthy burdock root, savory negi, and kiritanpo, rice pounded into cylinders and roasted before being boiled in the stew for a chewy, broth-infused dumpling.
15. Wagashi

Kyoto is famous for its artisanal sweets.
Served alongside a cup of tea, wagashi, or Japanese sweets, are small works of art meant to offset the bitter and astringent notes of green tea or matcha. Often incorporating mochi (pounded rice), sweetened bean paste, and fruit, wagashi are particularly famous in Kyoto.
One beautiful bite is the daifuku, which means “great luck.” The sweet pillow of mochi is most often filled with bean paste, but might also contain mugwort, chestnut paste, strawberry, or even chocolate.
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