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Japanese Food: Street Foods

 
Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

1. Yaki Imo

Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be found all over the Japan.
The trucks may drive around slowly repeating "yaki imo ... yaki imo ... yaki imo" on a loudspeaker. This is either annoying or charming depending on your outlook. Most people become nostalgic about them. They are an aspect of old Japan that's quickly fading into the past.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

2. Crepes

It's difficult to imagine how many crepe shops there might be in Japan. Certainly over 10,000. Many are trucks or street stalls. Crepe shops are usually surrounded by high school girls seriously contemplating the vast menu.


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Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

3. Okonomiyaki

Okonomiyaki are savory Japanese pancakes. They are traditionally prepared to use up leftovers at home. The matsuri(festival) version is usually packed with filling items such as thick cut bacon.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

4. Dango

Japanese mochiko dumplings on a stick. Typically in a shoyu and sugar sauce.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

5. Senbei

Senbei are Japanese rice crackers that come in hundreds of varieties both sweet and savory. Yatai offer fresh grilled senbei that are a step up from packaged senbei.
The town of Nara has senbei yatai for tourists who want to feed the town's many deer. This practice has turned these quiet animals into senbei crazed troublemakers.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

6. Takoyaki

Savory ball-shaped pancakes with octopus at the center topped with mayonnaise, ginger pickles and fermented fish flakes.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

7. Kare Pan

A bun with Japanese curry in the center. Similar to a curry doughnut.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

8. Oden

Oden is a winter dish of meats, fish and vegetable items stewed in a light broth for a very long time.
Good for warming up on a cold night. Oden yatai are often surprisingly lively.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

9. Shioyaki

Baked fish (often mackerel) on a stick. Saltier than salt itself.


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Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

10. Yakisoba

Fried wheat noodles with pork in a thick, sweet sauce.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

11. Poteto

French fries, the American classic. Much the same in Japan.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

12. Ramen

Fukuoka is known for its many excellent ramen noodle yatai.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

13. Taiyaki

Fish shaped cakes filled with custard, chocolate or cheese.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

14. Choco Banana

Banana coated in chocolate and sprinkles on a stick.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

15. Tomorokoshi

Corn grilled with miso, butter and soy sauce on a stick.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

16. Jaga Bata

Baked potato with skin peeled topped with butter.


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Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

17. Bento

Japanese business districts attract bento yatai. They open for an hour or two at lunch on business days. The best of them sell out in 10 or 15 minutes.
This is a tough business that depends on loyal customers. Tokyo office workers are thinking about lunch all morning. They're looking for something spectacularly tasty.
There is intense competition for their business from restaurants, convenience stores and yatai. Word of mouth spreads. A bento yatai with a good reputation will enjoy a long line of customers each business day.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

18. *****

The Japanese believe that ***** (cucumbers) cool you down. Cucumbers on a stick with a little miso paste is the perfect food for hot summer nights.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

19. Japanese Curry Rice

Japan is obsessed with mild curry similar to a spicy gravy. It's a staple of the Japanese diet. It's common to eat it twice a week.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

20. Watame

American carnival classics such as cotton candy (watame) and candy apples are matsuri favorites. Yatai cotton candy comes wrapped in a plastic bag decorated with jpop bands or popular cartoon characters.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

21. Ikayaki

Grilled squid. (My favorite street food)


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

22. Nikuman

Nikuman is the Japanese name for Chinese Baozi dumplings filled with pork.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

23. Bebi Kasutera

Kasutera is a Japanese sponge cake inspired by Portuguese Pao de Castela.
Bebi Kasutera are the bite sized (baby size) version of this popular cake.


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Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

24. Onsen Tamago

Onsen tamago are eggs that have been cooked by a natural onsen hot spring.
The slow cooking process gives the egg a texture like custard. It's typically served in dashi and soy sauce.


Japanese Food: Street Foods. 1. Yaki Imo Yaki Imo are baked sweet potatoes cooked over a wood fire. Yaki Imo trucks and carts fitted with wood stoves can be fou

Bizengaust is a Russian-American lady who teaches English in Kyoto Japan and cannot watch Ju-on alone without freaking out.

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Submitted: 04/07/2015
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#6 - mrsnowballs (04/07/2015) [-]
What about jelly doughnuts? Those are great right?
#13 to #6 - magjoeic (04/07/2015) [-]
What about a jelly donut on a stick!
#8 to #6 - bizengaust [OP](04/07/2015) [-]
I was actually going to do onigiri today but decided against it. Another time I will cover those delicious doughnuts.
I was actually going to do onigiri today but decided against it. Another time I will cover those delicious doughnuts.
#7 to #6 - letrollzor (04/07/2015) [-]
Probably covered in the next one
#10 - ipostcheesepizza (04/07/2015) [-]
Chocolate bananas you say?
#23 - alcatronz (04/08/2015) [-]
Unchained
0
#31 to #23 - profesoreoak has deleted their comment [-]
User avatar #109 to #23 - midothegreat (04/08/2015) [-]
The "J" is silent?
#32 to #23 - profesoreoak (04/08/2015) [-]
dango dango dango dango dango daikazoku bitch
User avatar #35 to #32 - bleachtaire (04/08/2015) [-]
Yassssss
Clannad
yasssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss
User avatar #22 - milkyhammer (04/08/2015) [-]
RAT CHEF real street food
#3 - masterboll (04/07/2015) [-]
OP's mums dildo collection
#124 to #3 - awkwardjew (04/08/2015) [-]
*Joshlol's
User avatar #9 to #3 - wcpapier (04/07/2015) [-]
you mean his dads
User avatar #50 to #9 - supervizor (04/08/2015) [-]
But OP is female. It's her collection.
#4 - hardstylehobo (04/07/2015) [-]
want
want
#59 - ionlywhisper (04/08/2015) [-]
As a kid I lived in Southern-South Korea. From my home town to Japan, with a fast boat It would take about 3 hours. My grandmother was educated in Japan, and my mom has license in cooking traditional Korean food. My grandma always brought us Japanese food ever since I was a kid. I didn't even know their names properly.   
   
The thing about Japanese food is that some of them are so simple that it exists in many other countries as well. Like... Sashimi. It's just a 			*******		 raw fish. But when you say Sushi, it sounds exotic as 			****		. It's like Foe Gras. It's overstuffed duck liver. Like, would you ever say:   
   
"Sir, would you like some cooked-overstuffed-duck-liver for three hundred dollars?" 			****		 no. Foe Gras? Oui.   
   
Another notable example would be Grilled squid. Like, what the 			****		. Why is that even a traditional food specific to Japanese? Mankind has cooked things for centuries. I'm pretty sure the Greeks or Mesopotamians has had "grilled" squids longer than any of us Asians did.   
   
And "stuffed whatever" is most likely originated from China.   
   
Most of the Japanese culture stems from China. Heian era was the golden age of Japan in terms of culture, literature, art, and nobility. Almost all of Japan's "traditions" comes from Heian period, which frankly was just a copy of Chinese culture.   
   
Am I saying the Chinese win in this case? No. Africans win this time  swag    
   
Say whatever the 			****		 you want about this post you 			*******		 weabs.
As a kid I lived in Southern-South Korea. From my home town to Japan, with a fast boat It would take about 3 hours. My grandmother was educated in Japan, and my mom has license in cooking traditional Korean food. My grandma always brought us Japanese food ever since I was a kid. I didn't even know their names properly.

The thing about Japanese food is that some of them are so simple that it exists in many other countries as well. Like... Sashimi. It's just a ******* raw fish. But when you say Sushi, it sounds exotic as **** . It's like Foe Gras. It's overstuffed duck liver. Like, would you ever say:

"Sir, would you like some cooked-overstuffed-duck-liver for three hundred dollars?" **** no. Foe Gras? Oui.

Another notable example would be Grilled squid. Like, what the **** . Why is that even a traditional food specific to Japanese? Mankind has cooked things for centuries. I'm pretty sure the Greeks or Mesopotamians has had "grilled" squids longer than any of us Asians did.

And "stuffed whatever" is most likely originated from China.

Most of the Japanese culture stems from China. Heian era was the golden age of Japan in terms of culture, literature, art, and nobility. Almost all of Japan's "traditions" comes from Heian period, which frankly was just a copy of Chinese culture.

Am I saying the Chinese win in this case? No. Africans win this time swag

Say whatever the **** you want about this post you ******* weabs.
#79 to #59 - hurzg (04/08/2015) [-]
I'm Anatolian, and while 'grilling' is very popular here, squid are not cheap food that you can sell as street food. So mostly you get it from restaurants which fry them. Sushi is I think the stupidest idea ever. I don't understand the hype about it, probably the weebs.

What do you mean by Africans win? Are you referring to North African cuisine?
#82 to #59 - hongkonglongdong (04/08/2015) [-]
M8, the post has crêpes, candy floss and baked potatoes. I think it's just meant to be street food that's popular in Japan, not food that's limited/indigenous to Japan.
#76 to #59 - anotheroneonearth (04/08/2015) [-]
>Most of the Japanese culture stems from China.
so does Korean culture
#77 to #76 - ionlywhisper (04/08/2015) [-]
i never denied Korean culture coming from China.

Chinese culture stems from Africa
#80 to #77 - anotheroneonearth (04/08/2015) [-]
yea we all should admire Africa I guess
#81 to #80 - ionlywhisper (04/08/2015) [-]
srs tho have u tried Ethiopian cuisine omfg
srs tho have u tried Ethiopian cuisine omfg
#83 to #81 - anotheroneonearth (04/08/2015) [-]
no one has
jokes aside just googled and it doesn't look bad at all
User avatar #146 to #77 - rejakted (04/08/2015) [-]
Yeah well, everything came from Africa. Or was it Australia? ******* aborigines, man.
#61 - xcoreyx (04/08/2015) [-]
Most of those look ******* delicious. Like why aren't these bananas a thing in the US? Instead I'm stuck with cereal made from chickpea flour. I really need to move out.
#84 to #61 - anon (04/08/2015) [-]
They're not a thing in the US? We have them in Germany.
#126 to #61 - anon (04/08/2015) [-]
They are though. Obviously your parents just didn't love you enough to get you one.
#131 to #61 - freshpound (04/08/2015) [-]
"why aren't these bananas a thing in the US"
You haven't even got Bananas? It's no wonder America is overweight, we got all sorts of fruit here. By the way they are soft and yellow inside.
#147 to #131 - xcoreyx (04/08/2015) [-]
Of course we have ******* bananas. But not these bananas, which was quite clearly referring to the chocolate-covered ones in the image I posted.
User avatar #148 to #147 - freshpound (04/08/2015) [-]
We have, candy-coated apples too. I bet you've never heard of anything like that. I assume you have apples too, not refering to Apple the hardware/software company.
#155 to #148 - xcoreyx (04/09/2015) [-]
Caramel apples are pretty big in the US actually. Just never seen one of those tasty-looking bananas.
#156 to #155 - freshpound (04/09/2015) [-]
We haven't got them in the UK either but I would think they are easy enough to make.
#157 to #156 - xcoreyx (04/10/2015) [-]
But that takes time and effort
#133 to #61 - anon (04/08/2015) [-]
America has chosen chocolate covered bacon and a deep fried stick of butter than something consider healthy by comparison.

USA is obviously fattest best America
#68 to #61 - anon (04/08/2015) [-]
because there's fruit in them
#63 - megapepsifreak (04/08/2015) [-]
mfw this comp
mfw this comp
User avatar #1 - syrenthra (04/07/2015) [-]
I don't care for many Eastern Style foods, but damn there are some good looking ones here
#111 - berengar (04/08/2015) [-]
I am rather hungry right now.
I am rather hungry right now.
#121 - jimmytwoshoes (04/08/2015) [-]
Dango....
Dango....
#115 - bronypie (04/08/2015) [-]
How do the hell do you eat Taiyaki?!
How do the hell do you eat Taiyaki?!
#120 - superanonymouspers ONLINE (04/08/2015) [-]
FIGHT FOR YOUR BEN-TO!!!!!
User avatar #129 to #120 - whycanticaps (04/08/2015) [-]
Ha I was thinking of that too, I really need to finish that
#114 - MaverickZero ONLINE (04/08/2015) [-]
I need these things in my stomach.
#108 - tormain (04/08/2015) [-]
I have a mighty need!
#75 - anotheroneonearth (04/08/2015) [-]
fun fact: in many cases those food stands at matsuri are ruled by yakuza.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tekiya
#57 - anon (04/08/2015) [-]
TAMAGO KAKE GOHAN
SEARCH THAT **** IT IS ONE OF THE MOST SIMPLE AND GREATEST JAPANESE FOODS IN THE WORLD JESUS CHRIST I LOVE IT SO MUCH AND YOU CAN TOO
#118 to #57 - millennial (04/08/2015) [-]
For those too lazy to google, it's just rice mixed with egg and soy sauce.    
Pic semi kinda not really related
For those too lazy to google, it's just rice mixed with egg and soy sauce.
Pic semi kinda not really related
#128 to #118 - imjared (04/08/2015) [-]
i almost always make sunny side up eggs with my rice
bacon with yoked rice
spam with yoked rice
adobo, vienna sausage, corned beef, longanisa, any meat really goes will with rice and egg
#123 - wilder (04/08/2015) [-]
I hunger.
I hunger.
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