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  2. Japanese rice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_rice

    Japanese rice refers to a number of short-grain cultivars of Japonica rice including ordinary rice (uruchimai) and glutinous rice (mochigome). Ordinary Japanese rice, or uruchimai (粳米), is the staple of the Japanese diet and consists of short translucent grains. When cooked, it has a sticky texture such that it can easily be picked up and ...

  3. List of Japanese ingredients - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_ingredients

    Rice. Short or medium grain white rice. Regular (non-sticky) rice is called uruchi-mai. Mochi rice (glutinous rice)-sticky rice, sweet rice; Genmai (brown rice) Rice bran (nuka) – not usually eaten itself, but used for pickling, and also added to boiling water to parboil tart vegetables; Arare – toasted brown rice grains in genmai cha and ...

  4. List of Japanese dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_dishes

    A Japanese dinner Japanese breakfast foods Tempura udon. Below is a list of dishes found in Japanese cuisine. Apart from rice, staples in Japanese cuisine include noodles, such as soba and udon. Japan has many simmered dishes such as fish products in broth called oden, or beef in sukiyaki and nikujaga.

  5. Kamameshi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamameshi

    The term emerged in the late Meiji period, and is associated with the communal eating of rice in the aftermath of the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake. Later, similar to takikomi gohan, kamameshi came to refer to a type of Japanese pilaf cooked with various types of meat, seafood, and vegetables, and flavored with soy sauce, sake, or mirin.

  6. Onigiri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onigiri

    Add condiments such as chives, miyakogusa, wasabi, grated ginger, nori, umeboshi plum, and pour hot Japanese-style soup stock. Eat while breaking up the onigiri that have absorbed the soup stock. There are several variations of the age-onigiri. For example, there is a version where the rice being fried has Japanese flavoring, such as takikomi ...

  7. Gyūdon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyūdon

    Gyūdon (牛丼, "beef bowl"), also known as gyūmeshi (牛飯 or 牛めし, "beef [and] rice"), is a Japanese dish consisting of a bowl of rice topped with beef and onion, simmered in a mildly sweet sauce flavored with dashi (fish and seaweed stock), soy sauce and mirin (sweet rice wine).

  8. Nattō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nattō

    Nattō is a traditional Japanese food made from whole soybeans that have been fermented with Bacillus subtilis var. natto. [1] It is often served as a breakfast food with rice. [2] It is served with karashi mustard, soy or tare sauce, and sometimes Japanese bunching onion.

  9. Katsudon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katsudon

    The dish takes its name from the Japanese words tonkatsu (for 'pork cutlet') and donburi (for 'rice bowl dish'). It has become a modern tradition for Japanese students to eat katsudon the night before taking a major test or school entrance exam. This is because "katsu" is a homophone of the verb katsu (勝つ), meaning "to win" or "to be ...