Kanto Food– Famous Tokyo Dishes & Eastern Japan Cuisine –
The Kanto region is home to Tokyo and several major cities, making it one of the most influential culinary areas in Japan. The region includes Tokyo, Kanagawa, Chiba, Saitama, Gunma, Tochigi, and Ibaraki.
Kanto food is known for iconic dishes such as Edo-style sushi, tempura, monjayaki, and a wide variety of noodle dishes. The region blends historical Edo cuisine with modern food culture.
In this category, explore the diverse food traditions of the Kanto region and discover the regional dishes that helped shape modern Japanese cuisine.
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Kanto
Quincy melon (クインシーメロン)
If you've ever walked through a Japanese supermarket in summer, you've probably seen it. A round, netted melon with a warm amber rind. It sits quietly on the shelf, modestly priced. That's the クインシーメロン — the Quincy melon. So, wha... -
Kanto
Ibaraking Melon (イバラキング)
If you've spent any time exploring Japanese fruit culture, you know how seriously people take their melons. Walk into any department store basement and you'll find them: perfectly shaped, gift-wrapped, and priced like jewelry. Among them... -
Kanto
Shimonita Negi (下仁田ネギ)
Most people do not think much about green onions. They are a garnish, a background note, an afterthought. Then you eat a Shimonita negi, and that changes. 下仁田ネギ (Shimonita negi) is a premium Japanese green onion from Shimonita Town ... -
Kanto
Takasaki Pasta (高崎パスタ)
If you think Italy holds a monopoly on great pasta, think again. Deep in Gunma Prefecture, about 90 kilometers northwest of Tokyo, sits a city called Takasaki. And Takasaki has a secret. Locals call it the "pasta city" of Japan. That lab... -
Kanto
Yaki Manju (焼きまんじゅう)
Gunma is not always the first prefecture that comes to mind when people talk about Japanese food. That is honestly its loss. Because somewhere in the back streets of Maebashi, Takasaki, and Isesaki, someone is standing over a charcoal gr... -
Kanto
Ibaraki Melon (茨城のメロン)
When people in Japan think of premium melon, Hokkaido comes to mind first. Yubari melon has that kind of reputation. It shows up at auction for staggering prices. It makes the news every spring. But ask where most of Japan's melons actua... -
Kanto
Hitachi Aki Soba (常陸秋そば)
Japan offers many varieties of noodles for hungry travelers. While many people enjoy ramen, soba holds a quiet, elegant charm. Have you heard of Hitachi Aki Soba? It comes from Ibaraki Prefecture and is truly special. I remember tasting ... -
Kanto
Mito Umeshu (水戸の梅酒)
There is a garden in Mito that changes everything in late February. Kairakuen fills with the scent of plum blossoms before most of Japan has noticed winter is ending. Three thousand trees, one hundred varieties. The pale pink and white f... -
Kanto
Monjayaki vs Okonomiyaki: What’s the Real Difference?
You have probably heard of okonomiyaki. But monjayaki? That one trips up a lot of first-time visitors to Japan. Both dishes involve a hot iron griddle, batter, and a group of people crowded around a table. Yet they taste, look, and feel ... -
Kanto
What to Eat in Yokohama: 20 Must-Try Foods for Every Visitor
Yokohama is Japan's most cosmopolitan food city. As the country's first modern port, opened in 1859, it became the birthplace of Japan's ramen culture, home to the nation's largest Chinatown, and the city where Western-style dining first...
