Do More With Reuters

Okinawa cuisine: tofu, Spam and root beer

Wed Mar 12, 2008 6:11pm IST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

By Linda Sieg

NAHA, Japan (Reuters) - Spam, "taco rice" and A&W Root Beer -- if you're looking to sample authentic Okinawan cuisine, these are musts for the menu.

Residents of the southern Japanese island of Okinawa might like their tofu and other Japanese favourites, but they are just as likely to tuck into fast food burgers and other dishes first made familiar by American troops.

"We've been used to American food from an early age and people think it's just as Okinawan as 'chanpuru' (stir fry)," said Yasuyuki Takaesu, 38, master chef at a restaurant in the Okinawa capital of Naha that serves traditional fare such as crunchy "mimiga" (pig ears) and "rafuti" (flavoured stewed pork).

"Lots of people my age are getting fat, but I just can't stop eating fried chicken and hamburgers," he added with a grimace.

Okinawa was occupied by the U.S. military from Japan's 1945 defeat in World War Two until 1972, and remains host to the bulk of U.S. troops in Japan under a bilateral security treaty.

Mainland Japanese often shake their heads at the sweet taste of A&W's trademark drink, but Americans can find it comforting to grab a burger, onion rings and root beer -- refills free in a frosty glass mug -- at one of the many A&W's dotting the island.

"It's nostalgic," said U.S. Consul General Kevin Maher.

SPAM AND "TACO CURRY"  Continued...

 
Photo
Photo

Catch the latest as India acts to quash inflation and guard food supplies.  Full Coverage 

Photo

Catch the latest developments post the elections in Nepal meant to map the country's political future.  Full Coverage 

Being a Chinese acrobat 

A look at the Chinese National Acrobatic Troupe as they train in Beijing.