enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Customs and etiquette in Japanese dining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customs_and_etiquette_in...

    Many restaurants and homes in Japan are equipped with Western-style chairs and tables. However, traditional Japanese low tables and cushions, usually found on tatami floors, are also very common. Tatami mats, which are made of straw, can be easily damaged and are hard to clean, thus shoes or any type of footwear are always taken off when ...

  3. Yoshinoya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshinoya

    Yoshinoya in Nagoya. In its restaurants in Japan, tables are often counters, and in that case, they take orders over those counters. Chopsticks are provided. The menu includes standard-serving (並盛, namimori, or nami), large-serving (大盛, ōmori), or extra-large-serving (特盛, tokumori) [9] beef bowls, pork bowls (豚丼, butadon), [10] raw eggs (to stir and pour on top, sometimes ...

  4. List of Japanese restaurants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_restaurants

    Itsu – a British chain of Asian-inspired fast food shops and restaurants, and a grocery company [10] Tokyo Diner – a three-floor Japanese restaurant on the corner of Newport Place and Lisle Street in the "Chinatown" area of the West End of London; Uma, London; Wagamama – restaurant chain; Wasabi – restaurant chain; YO! Sushi ...

  5. Onigiri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onigiri

    Onigiri (お握り or 御握り), also known as omusubi (お結び) or nigirimeshi (握り飯), is a Japanese rice ball made from white rice.It is usually formed into triangular or cylindrical shapes, and wrapped in nori (seaweed).

  6. List of sushi restaurants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sushi_restaurants

    Itsu – a British chain of Asian-inspired fast food shops and restaurants, and a grocery company. [20] Kokoro – a Korean-Japanese sushi restaurant chain operating throughout the UK [21] Wasabi – a fast food restaurant chain based in the United Kingdom focused on Japanese food, especially sushi and bento, it operates in London and New York ...

  7. Sukiya (restaurant chain) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukiya_(restaurant_chain)

    Sukiya (すき家, stylized as SUKIYA) is a Japanese restaurant chain specializing in gyūdon (beef bowl). It is the largest gyūdon chain in Japan. [1] It operates over 2,000 stores in Japan, and has branch stores across Asia. Sukiya's owner, Zensho Holdings, is listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange and had sales of ¥511 billion in 2016.

  8. Omakase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omakase

    The Japanese antonym for omakase is okonomi (from 好み konomi, "preference, what one likes"), which means choosing what to order. [5] In American English , the expression is used by patrons at sushi restaurants to leave the selection to the chef , as opposed to ordering à la carte . [ 6 ]

  9. Saizeriya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saizeriya

    A Saizeriya restaurant in Nagoya, Japan. The current president of the company, Yasuhiko Shōgaki, worked at a western restaurant in Ichikawa, Chiba called Saizeriya while he was attending Tokyo University of Science. The manager at the time recognized his skill, and when Shōgaki became a senior in school, he inherited the restaurant.