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  2. Japanese cuisine in São Paulo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_cuisine_in_São_Paulo

    Japanese Brazilians adapted their native cuisine to incorporate the types of food available in Brazil, such as replacing rice with corn or cassava. Until the 1980s, Japanese cuisine was not popular in São Paulo outside the Japanese Brazilian community. By the 1990s, Japanese restaurants were available throughout the city, including a type of ...

  3. Liberdade (district of São Paulo) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberdade_(district_of_São...

    Liberdade (Portuguese: [libeʁˈdadʒi], liberty; Japanese: リベルダージ, romanized: Riberudāji) is the name of a district in the subprefecture of Sé, in São Paulo, Brazil. Liberdade is known as a Japantown, although the Japanese presence did not occur throughout the neighborhood, but in specific streets. Japanese immigrants started ...

  4. Liberdade street market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberdade_street_market

    The Liberdade district is a Japantown of São Paulo. The Japanese contributed with flowers production, rice, vegetables, mushrooms and macrobiotic food beyond martial arts. [ 4 ] They keep their cultural tracts transforming Brazilian culture as their own was modified as well.

  5. Japanese community of São Paulo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_community_of_São...

    The Taisho School, Brazil's first Japanese language school, opened in 1915 in São Paulo. [10] In the 1980s, São Paulo Japanese supplementary schools were larger than those in other communities. In 1992 the São Paulo Metropolitan Area had 95 Japanese schools, and the schools in the city limits of São Paulo had 6,916 students.

  6. Japanese Brazilians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_Brazilians

    Japanese descendants in São Paulo.: Total population; 46.9 thousand (2023) Japanese citizens living in Brazil [1] and an estimated 2 million (2022) Brazilian nationals of Japanese descent living in Brazil (about 1% of the Brazilian population).

  7. Brazilian cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazilian_cuisine

    Special ethnic foods and restaurants that are frequently found in Brazil include Arab cuisine (Lebanese and Syrian), local variations of Chinese cuisine (nevertheless closer to the traditional than American Chinese cuisine), Italian cuisine, and Japanese cuisine (sushi bars are a constant in major metropolises, and people from Rio de Janeiro ...

  8. Japanese diaspora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_diaspora

    Japanese food known as Nikkei cuisine is a rich part of Peruvian-Japanese culture, ... São Paulo, Brazil: 11,295; Gold Coast, Australia: 10,901;

  9. Japanese immigration in Brazil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_immigration_in_Brazil

    Japanese postage stamp in 1958. Poster advertising the immigration of Japanese to Brazil and Peru.. At the beginning of the 20th century, Japan was overpopulated. [16] The country had been isolated from the world during the 265 years of the Edo period (Tokugawa shogunate), with no wars, epidemics from outside or emigration.