logo
Conveyor belt sushi system for world cuisine? Special Kura Sushi branch has food from over 70 countries

Conveyor belt sushi system for world cuisine? Special Kura Sushi branch has food from over 70 countries

SoraNews2417 hours ago
Kura Sushi shows up at the world's fair with food from around the globe that it sends around the restaurant.
Speedy, affordable, customizable, convenient, and fun, kaitenzushi, a.k.a. kaiten sushi, revolving sushi, or conveyor belt sushi, has become a symbol of the joy of Japanese cuisine not just for the local population, but also visitors to the country from overseas. So it's no surprise that Kura Sushi, one of Japan's most popular kaitenzushi chains, has a restaurant at the Expo 2025 world's fair going on in Osaka right now.
This is no ordinary conveyor belt sushi joint, though. The whole point of a world's fair is for the exhibitors to share their cultures with other, and Kura Sushi took this as an opportunity to apply the kaitenzushi concept to world cuisine, so its restaurant at Expo 2025 serves not only sushi, but representatives dishes from the culinary traditions of 70 different countries from around the globe.
Scrolling through the menu, you'll find little flags next to each of these dishes, as many of them are recipes the average Japanese person most likely isn't very familiar with. Our Japanese-language reporter Haruka Takagi certainly was seeing many of them for the first time during her visit on a pre-opening press day.
So while Haruka hadn't had to travel very far from her home to the Expo 2025 venue, her taste buds were about to take a journey around the world, as she dove headfirst into Kura Sushi's kaiten-not sushi offerings, specifically picking things she's never tried before from countries she hasn't been able to visit yet.
Let's take a look at her tasting notes
● Cuba: Ropa vieja
This is a simple dish of stewed beef and vegetables, that gets its name because the tattered look of the beef is said to resemble 'old clothes,' which is what ropa vieja literally translates to.
The beef is simmered long enough to become very tender, and the tart notes from the tomato blend very nicely with it. The flavors aren't shockingly strong, and there's nothing startling about them, but it's a nice change of pace that's unique from Japanese-style simmered dishes. It's kind of like a beef stew, but without the demi-glace and more tomato notes. It was also great with a squeeze of lemon to add a little fruitiness.
● Colombia: Papa criolla with hogao sauce
This turned out to be a plate of small fried potatoes with tomato sauce on them. The sauce had a chunky texture, with strong salty and sour flavors, and felt like salsa but with the heat taken out of it. The potatoes are a Columbian type that cook up fluffy and have a noticeable natural sweetness to them.
The seasoning definitely reminds you that this is a food from another culture, but I think that in any country people will agree that potatoes and tomato-based sauces are a great combo.
● Kosovo: Kofte
This is like an oblong all-pork hamburger steak finished with a yogurt-based sauce. The meat wasn't fatty, and the herbs mixed in with it gave it a refreshing flavor. I'd have never thought to put yogurt sauce on meat, but the combination works really well. The pickles that came with it were great too, and I felt like I could eat a whole bunch of them.
● Paraguay: Pollo Asado
This is a dish of roasted chicken topped with onions, parsley, and vinegar sauce. The chicken itself reminded me of teriyaki chicken, giving this a home-cooking kind of vibe, but the sauce and onions were unlike anything I'm used to. You can taste both fruit and spice in the sauce, so you end up with a mix of sweet, sour, and hot flavors. It seems like the kind of thing that people would eat in a hot climate, and sure enough, Asunción, the capital of Paraguay, is one of the hottest capital cities in the world, so I imagine eating this kind of food is a way to cope with the heat.
● Lithuania: Šaltibarščiai
This is a cold beet soup. Thick and creamy, with a sweetness from the beets, this hits the spot on a hot day. Seriously, from the first taste this made me feel happy. It came with a side of sliced bread crisps loaded with garlic, and that strong flavor added a kick to the taste of the soup.
Really, though, my favorite was to just eat the soup by itself, and it was so good that now I want to try making it at home.
● Aho: Palau
There's no way people in the Osaka area can pass up trying a food called aho, since aho is also a colorful way of saying 'you dummy' in Osaka dialect. This is a tropical dessert made with coconut and rice cakes. The sauce has a substantial, gelatin-like texture, so it gets all over the rice cake and delivers a super flavorful sensation of coconut milk.
Even though she'd picked out the dishes that seemed the most unfamiliar to her, Haruka thoroughly enjoyed every one of the new foods she tried.
On the management side, there are a couple of extra difficulties that come with this wider menu, of course. In addition to having an extra-large customer capacity, the Expo 2025 Kura Sushi has an extra-large staff, with a total of about 200 employees working at the restaurant, and cooking responsibilities divided up so that any individual cook only needs to focus on a portion of the menu. The Expo 2025 restaurant crew was also selected from experienced Kura Sushi employees from around the Osaka area, since their experience will help them keep track of the greater complexities that come with the added variety.
Still, Haruka's meal showed that the kaiten sushi concept really can be applied to other cuisines as well, allowing customers to order small plates to sample whatever looks intriguing to them, helping them discover and fall in love with edible contact points with the culture of countries beyond their own.
Related: Kura Sushi Expo 2025 official website
Photos ©SoraNews24
● Want to hear about SoraNews24's latest articles as soon as they're published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Japanese travelers losing interest in Kyoto, top sightseeing spots slip behind Nara at peak season
Japanese travelers losing interest in Kyoto, top sightseeing spots slip behind Nara at peak season

SoraNews24

time6 hours ago

  • SoraNews24

Japanese travelers losing interest in Kyoto, top sightseeing spots slip behind Nara at peak season

Kyoto may be the historical heart of traditional Japanese culture, but current conditions are making it a less attractive placer for locals to visit. Aside from maybe Tokyo, there's no other city with more of a 'must-visit' reputation than Kyoto for travelers to Japan, who flock to the country's former capital to tour its historic temples, beautiful gardens, and otherwise get a glimpse of Japanese traditional culture. For a growing number of Japanese travelers vacationing in their home country, however, Kyoto is becoming a city they feel like they can leave off their itinerary. Tokyo-based data/research organization Blogwatcher recently released the results of its analysis of travel patterns during Japan's 2025 Golden Week holiday season, which straddled the end of April and beginning of May. Examining mobile phone location data, Blogwatcher determined that there were significant drop-offs in the number of Japanese visitors to five of Kyoto's most famous sightseeing spots compared to just two years prior. Japanese visitors to Fushimi Inari Shrine plummeted by 40.4 percent compared to 2023, and both Kiyomizudera Temple and Kinkakuij/the Golden Pavillion's numbers of Japanese visitors fell by roughly 25 percent. Shimogamo Shrine and Byodoiin Temple both had slight upticks in Japanese visitors in 2024, but reversed course in 2025 and had approximately 10 percent fewer domestic visitors than they'd had at Golden Week in 2023. ▼ Byodoin's Phoenix Hall is so famous that it's even depicted on the 10-yen coin. It's not hard to imagine what's discouraging Japanese travelers from visiting Kyoto. The weak yen continues to make Japan more affordable for foreign travelers to visit than it's been in a generation, and with so many of them including Kyoto in their Japan travel plans, the city's attractions are crowded and its hotels expensive. The Kyoto Tourism Association's data shows that through the first five months of this year, the average price per night for a stay in a Kyoto hotel is around 50 percent more than it was just two years ago. Those cost increases are relatively easy for inbound foreign visitors to soak up as they leverage the favorable exchange rate, but for Japanese travelers, who are already getting hit in the wallet by rapidly increasing consumer prices without equivalent wage increases, the idea of paying inflated prices to go someplace clogged with tourists is no doubt feeling like a less enjoyable way to spend their diminished disposable income. However, as Kyoto is looking like a less attractive destination for Japanese travelers, they're becoming more drawn to Nara. Blogwatcher tracks domestic visitor numbers for 33 of Kyoto Prefecture's top temples, shrines, and historical tourism sites, and 37 in Nara Prefecture. During Golden Week in 2023, Japanese travelers showed an overwhelming preference for Kyoto, with its top sights receiving nearly 70 percent more Japanese visitors than Nara's. In 2025, though, more Japanese travelers visited Nara's major sights than Kyoto's. Japanese visitors to major temples, shrine, and historic sites during Golden Week ● Kyoto 2023: 746,000 ● Nara 2023: 446,00 ● Kyoto 2025: 559,000 ● Nara 2025: 561,00 It could be argued that Japan is still in the middle of the initial wave of its inbound tourism boom. Residual pent-up international travel demand and the weak yen are doing a lot to make the country a trendy and affordable choice for visitors from abroad, but it's still not entirely clear whether their intense interest is going to be permanent. As a result, it's likewise too early to say whether huge crowds and high prices have turned Japanese people off to the idea of traveling to Kyoto entirely, or if they're simply putting their Kyoto plans on the back burner for the time being. After all, if the shrines and temples you're going to see are already centuries old, holding back for a year or two to see if the tourism congestion has settled down doesn't seem like all that long of a wait. For the time being, though, it really does look like Japan's travelers aren't nearly as excited about the idea of visiting Kyoto as they were just a short while ago. Source: TBS Cross Dig with Bloomberg via Golden Times Top image: Pakutaso Insert image: Pakutaso ● Want to hear about SoraNews24's latest articles as soon as they're published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!

Upcoming Tokyo Exhibitions and Art Shows: August 2025
Upcoming Tokyo Exhibitions and Art Shows: August 2025

Tokyo Weekender

time9 hours ago

  • Tokyo Weekender

Upcoming Tokyo Exhibitions and Art Shows: August 2025

A look at upcoming exhibitions and art shows across Tokyo for the month of August. Whether you want to see some traditional Japanese art or a modern exhibit, here's everything worth checking out. List of Contents: Tokyo Art Shows in August Tokyo Exhibitions in August Related Posts Tokyo Art Shows in August Aki Sasamoto: Laboratory Explore Aki Sasamoto's 20-year journey in Laboratory, blending sculpture, performance and video at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum. Date & Time Aug 23-Nov 24・10:00-18:00・Last entry 30 minutes before closing Price Free Location Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Contemporary Art, 3F Special Exhibition Room More Details 60th Anniversary Gacha Gacha Exhibition Gachapon, or capsule toys, have been a staple of Japanese pop culture. Marking the 60th anniversary of gachapon in Japan, the Marunouchi Building is hosting a special exhibition highlighting the evolution of the toys and some of the biggest names in the industry. Date & Time Jul 26-Aug 15・10:00-19:00・Last Admission at 18:30, Closes at 17:00 on the last day of the exhibit (Last Admission: 16:30) Price ¥1200 for adults, ¥1000 for high school students, ¥800 for elementary and junior high school students, free for preschool children Location Marunouchi Building More Details Exhibition: World Fair in Japan 1970-2005 Architecture fans will delight in this deep dive into Japan's Expo designs, from Osaka in the '70's to Aichi 2005's eco-conscious pavilions. Date & Time Mar 08-Aug 31・10:00-16:30 Price Free Location National Archives of Modern Architecture More Info Closed on Mondays, except public holidays (closed the following day instead) More Details The Fear Exhibition The Fear Exhibition, at the Beam Gallery in Shibuya, explores fears and anxieties of the human heart. Focusing on both conventional and irrational fears, the exhibit is an opportunity for visitors to explore a wide range of phobias while also confronting their own fears. Date & Time Jul 18-Aug 31・11:00-20:00・last admission 30 minutes before closing Price ¥2300 Location Shibuya Beam More Details Isao Takahata Exhibition: The Man Who Planted Japanese Animation Explore the life and legacy of Isao Takahata, co-founder of Studio Ghibli, through rare art and materials from his iconic films, including Grave of the Fireflies, opening this summer at Azabudai Hills Gallery. Date & Time Jun 27-Sep 15・10:00-20:00・Last Entry 19:30 Price ¥1,200-¥2,000 Location Azabudai Hills Gallery More Details Ooku: Women of Power in Edo Castle Ooku: Women of Power in Edo Castle is a new special exhibition at the Tokyo National Museum running from July 19 to September 21 organized in cooperation with the Tokugawa Memorial Foundation. The exhibit features over 180 artifacts, connecting guests to the Empress Dowagers, concubines and maids of the shogunate. Date & Time Jul 19-Sep 21・~17:00・closed on July 22, open until 20:00 every Friday and Saturday, last admission 30 minutes before closing Price ¥2100 for adults, ¥1300 for university students, ¥900 for high school students Location Tokyo National Museum More Details The Architecture of Sou Fujimoto: Primordial Future Forest The Mori Art Museum will be exhibiting "The Architecture of Sou Fujimoto: Primordial Future Forest," a comprehensive overview of projects from architect Sou Fujimoto's design journey. Date & Time Jul 02-Nov 09・10:00-22:00・10:00-17:00 on Tuesdays, Open until 22:00 on September 23 Price ¥2300 for adults, ¥2000 for seniors, ¥1400 for university/high school students, free for children Location Mori Art Museum More Info admission price varies on weekends and holidays, online tickets are discounted More Details Discover Tokyo, Every Week Get the city's best stories, under-the-radar spots and exclusive invites delivered straight to your inbox. By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy . Tokyo Exhibitions in August Ando Teru Exhibition: The Sculptor of The Hachiko Statue This exhibition revisits the sculptor behind Shibuya's beloved Hachiko statue, marking 80 years since his death. Date & Time Jun 21-Aug 17・10:00-20:00 Price ¥1000 Location The Shoto Museum of Art More Info Closed on Mondays (except for July 21, and August 11, 2025), July 22(Tue.), and August 12(Tue.), 2025 More Details Related Posts Vatican Returns 26 Martyrs of Japan Portraits to Japan After 94 Years Kioi Seido: Tokyo's Enigmatic 'Building With No Purpose'

Ghost Story Boom Triggered by Social Conditions; Experts Theorize Why People Are Drawn to Ghost Stories
Ghost Story Boom Triggered by Social Conditions; Experts Theorize Why People Are Drawn to Ghost Stories

Yomiuri Shimbun

time13 hours ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

Ghost Story Boom Triggered by Social Conditions; Experts Theorize Why People Are Drawn to Ghost Stories

Ghost stories, called 'kaidan' in Japanese, are enjoying a quiet boom in the country. Live performances by popular ghost storytellers attract large crowds, and paperbacks featuring ghost stories are regularly published. Experts say that the boom has been fueled by YouTube and anxiety about the future of society. Popular after COVID-19'I'll share a somewhat strange story.' In March, ghost storyteller Murakami Rock, 47, began speaking slowly to customers under dim, purple-red lighting at Thriller Night, a bar in Tokyo's Kabukicho district that features live ghost storytelling. Murakami's performance opened with a description of a strange experience he heard about from a man in his the story, the man moves into a new apartment in Tokyo and starts to experience strange things in it a few days later. The apartment, which was built on land that had been vacant for nearly 50 years, has something very wrong with it. At one point, the story takes a spine-chilling turn. Murakami's skillful storytelling captivated the audience, who found themselves screaming in terror. The bar's main attraction is that customers can enjoy ghost stories while drinking alcohol. The interior is decorated with eerie Western dolls, skeletons and other creepy items, creating a spooky atmosphere. Every day, the bar attracts many customers wanting to hear ghost stories told live, giving it a reputation for providing 'amazing experiences.' Murakami, who said he was a 'struggling actor,' became a storyteller specializing in ghost stories in 2014. His popularity got a boost thanks to performances that he streamed on YouTube beginning in 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic.'The response was huge,' Murakami said. 'As soon as the pandemic subsided, the bar started getting many customers.' He is now a highly sought-after ghost storyteller, getting requests to perform from all over the country. The publishing industry is also enjoying the ghost story boom. Takeshobo Co., for example, publishes the 'Takeshobo Kaidan Bunko' (ghost story paperback) series, releasing five books a month. The series specializes in ghost stories that are based on the authors' own experiences or the accounts of others. Yoriko Ogawa, deputy editor-in-chief, explains that ghost-themed videos and ghost story gatherings have become popular since the pandemic. 'Many readers are impressed by the fact that the people who experienced the events actually exist, which gives the events a sense of realness and authenticity,' Ogawa said. Ghost story culture in EdoThe history of ghost stories in Japan started many years ago. Some ghost stories are already found in 'Konjaku Monogatari-shu,' a collection of old tales from the Heian period (794 to late 12th century). Ghost story culture flourished during the Edo period (1603-1867). Some ghost stories were adapted into kabuki plays that gained popularity among common people. 'Yotsuya Kaidan' (The ghost story of Yotsuya) based mainly on rumors that spread in Edo, now Tokyo, is among those stories. According to Prof. Yoshiyuki Iikura, a folklorist at Kokugakuin University who is knowledgeable about ghost stories, death was a frequent occurrence in everyday life during the medieval period due to wars and epidemics. In the era of peace that followed, death became more of a distant concept. As a result, people began to be scared by ghost stories, which relate to death, and even enjoy them for entertainment. Prof. Iikura said: 'Ghost stories didn't flourish during times of war. People only started enjoying them when there was no more immediate threat to their lives.' Many ghost stories from the Edo period, such as 'Yotsuya Kaidan,' feature oppressed women who become ghosts and seek revenge against powerful men. 'Although society in the late Edo period was stable, there was a sense of stagnation, and common people were anxious about the future,' Prof. Iikura said. 'They sought to vent their frustrations through ghost stories.' 'Real-life ghost stories' in 1990s People today may share a mindset of using ghost stories to distract themselves from anxiety. Ghost story researcher Yuki Yoshida, 44, says that the recent boom began in the 1990s, when 'school ghost stories' became popular in books and films. Then 'real-life ghost stories' based on personal experiences emerged and went mainstream. The collapse of the bubble economy, which filled people with anxiety about the future, coincided with the growing popularity of ghost stories. 'Ghost stories depict a mysterious and unstable world,' Yoshida said. 'That's why they resonate with unstable social climates and easily attract people.' He added, 'They evoke a certain sense, suggesting that this world is not the only one, that there might be another world out there.' Awe of deceased in disaster areas Ghost stories have also become an important bridge, connecting the memories of deceased loved ones with the feelings of those living today. Prof. Kiyoshi Kanebishi, an expert of disaster sociology at Kwansei Gakuin University, compiled a book titled 'Yobisamasareru Reisei no Shinsaigaku' (Awakened Spirituality in Earthquake Disaster Studies) with his seminar students and had it published by Shin-yo-sha Publishing Ltd. while working at Tohoku Gakuin University. The book includes accounts of ghost sightings in areas affected by the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake. In Ishinomaki, a city in Miyagi Prefecture affected by the disaster, several taxi drivers said they had 'ghost' passengers after the earthquake. A common thread in these narratives is that the people involved felt Lemore awe or kindness toward the ghosts than fear. Some people have visited the locations where the ghosts are said to have appeared in hopes of sensing the presence of their missing loved ones. 'In disaster-affected areas, ghosts are treated thoughtfully,' Prof. Kanebishi said. 'Unusual phenomena involving the appearance of deceased people are viewed as relatively common events.' One possible reason for the emergence of ghost stories is that the unprecedented quake resulted in a huge number of missing people. Many surviving families have had difficulty sending their loved ones off to the afterlife and calming their souls. 'The feelings of the families of missing people have not settled down,' Prof. Kanebishi said. 'I want people to understand that those in disaster-affected areas have a different perception of ghost stories from the typical perception involving curses and evil spirits.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store