KanjiN310 min read2026-02-15

Dining Culture — Kanji at the Japanese Table

飯, 膳, 丼, 鍋, 箸, 皿, 杯, 碗 — from utensils to cuisine styles, master the kanji of Japanese dining culture. Starting from 「いただきます」.

Japanese dining isn't just about eating — it's a culture. From 「いただきます」 before meals to 「ごちそうさま」 after, from the elegant 膳 (formal place setting) to the hearty 丼 (rice bowl) — every kanji tells a story.

This article takes you to the Japanese table to learn 20 dining culture kanji.

Core Kanji Table

Meals & Cuisine

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsNote
ショク (shoku)た (ta)・く (ku)eat, foodべる (たべる, to eat), (しょくじ, meal)The most basic "eat"
イン (in)の (no)drinkむ (のむ, to drink), (いんりょう, beverage) = drinks
ハン (han)めし (meshi)cooked rice, meal (ごはん, rice/meal), (あさめし, breakfast) = rice AND meal
ゼン (zen)tray, course御膳 (ごぜん, formal meal), 膳 (set meal tray)の膳 = one serving
ドン (don)rice bowl丼 (ぎゅうどん, beef bowl), 丼 (おやこどん, chicken & egg bowl) = bowl dishes
なべ (nabe)pot, hotpot (なべもの, hotpot), 鍋 (なべりょうり, pot cooking)すきき = sukiyaki
ヘイ (hei)もち (mochi)rice cakeお餅 (おもち, mochi), 餅つき (もちつき, mochi pounding) = New Year's mochi soup
カ (ka)confection (おかし, sweets), (わがし, Japanese sweets) = traditional Japanese confections

Utensils & Vessels

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsNote
はし (hashi)chopsticksお箸 (おはし, chopsticks), 箸き (はしおき, chopstick rest)割り箸 = disposable chopsticks
さら (sara)plate (おさら, plate), (こざら, small plate) = serving plate
ハイ (hai)さかずき (sakazuki)cup, glass杯 (かんぱい, cheers), 杯 (いっぱい, one cup)杯!= Cheers!
ワン (wan)bowl碗 (ちゃわん, rice bowl), お碗 (おわん, soup bowl)碗 = rice bowl (not tea bowl)
ボン (bon)tray (おぼん, tray), (ぼんさい, bonsai)Also the Obon festival
ビン (bin)bottle (かびん, vase), (いっしょうびん, 1.8L bottle)ビール = beer bottle
カン (kan)can (かんづめ, canned food), (あきかん, empty can)ビール = canned beer

Banquet Culture

KanjiOn'yomiKun'yomiMeaningCommon WordsNote
エン (en)うたげ (utage)banquet (えんかい, banquet), (えんせき, banquet seat) = year-end party
シャク (shaku)く (ku)pour sake (ばんしゃく, evening drink), わす (to share drinks) = evening tipple
スイ (sui)よ (yo)drunkう (よう, to get drunk), い (ふつかよい, hangover)い = hangover
ホウ (hō)あ (a)satiatedきる (あきる, to tire of), (ほうしょく, gluttony)きた = tired of eating
キョウ (kyō)feast (きょうえん, feast), 饗す (もてなす, to entertain)Formal banquet language

The Deep Meaning of いただきます

Japanese people say 「いただきます」 before meals and 「ごちそうさまでした」 after. This isn't religious prayer — it's an expression of gratitude toward food.

  • いただきます = "I humbly receive" (humble form of 頂く) → thanking the animals and plants that gave their lives for this meal
  • ごちそうさま = 馳走 (running around to gather ingredients) → thanking the cook who worked hard to prepare the meal

The kanji for 馳走 are 馳 (gallop) + 走 (run) — meaning the cook ran around everywhere to gather ingredients. The gratitude is directed at their effort.

Japanese Cuisine Terminology

DishKanjiExplanation
す (pierce) + (flesh)Sashimi — thinly sliced raw fish
ぷらTempura — deep-fried food, from Portuguese
寿寿Originally fish preserved with vinegar ( = vinegar)
噌 (miso) + (soup)Miso soup — Japan's soul food
便Bento — boxed meal, from Chinese "便當"

Chinese vs. Japanese Dining Kanji

JapaneseChineseDifference
(めし)饭 (rice)Similar, but ご means both "rice" and "meal"
餅 (もち)饼 (flatbread)Japanese 餅 = mochi (sticky rice cake)! Chinese 饼 = flatbread
(かし)sweetsJapanese preserves the ancient evolution: fruit → confection
丼 (どん)bowlChinese doesn't commonly use 丼

⚠️ Note: Japanese 餅 (もち) is mochi/rice cake, not flatbread!

Cultural Note: Ichijū-Sansai — The Structure of Washoku

The basic structure of traditional Japanese cuisine is 「一汁三菜」(いちじゅうさんさい):

  • 一汁 = one soup (usually miso soup)
  • 三菜 = three dishes (one main + two sides)
  • Plus ご飯 (rice) and 漬物 (pickles)

This structure reflects the Japanese pursuit of balanced eating. In 2013, washoku was designated a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage.

Practice

Q1. What's the deeper meaning of いただきます?

Show answer

Gratitude toward food. 頂く is a humble verb meaning "to receive respectfully." It expresses thanks to the animals and plants that sacrificed their lives for the meal.

Q2. What is Japanese 餅? How is it different from Chinese 饼?

Show answer

Japanese 餅 (もち) is mochi — a sticky rice cake made by pounding glutinous rice. Chinese 饼 is flatbread/pancake. Completely different!

Q3. What does 馳走 in ごちそうさま originally mean?

Show answer

Running around. 馳 (gallop) + 走 (run) = running everywhere to gather ingredients. The phrase thanks the cook for their effort in preparing the meal.

Q4. What does 一汁三菜 mean?

Show answer

One soup plus three dishes. The basic washoku structure: one soup (miso) + three dishes (one main + two sides), plus rice and pickles.

Q5. How do you read 丼 in 牛丼? What does it mean?

Show answer

どん (don). 丼 = a large bowl of rice with toppings. 牛丼 = beef rice bowl. Other popular don: 親子丼 (chicken & egg bowl), 天丼 (tempura bowl), 海鮮丼 (seafood bowl).

Summary

  • The core of Japanese dining culture: gratitude — いただきます and ごちそうさま
  • Utensil kanji: 箸 (chopsticks), 皿 (plate), 碗 (bowl), 杯 (cup)
  • Watch for false friends: 餅 = mochi (not flatbread), 飯 = rice AND meal
  • Washoku basic structure: 一汁三菜 (one soup, three dishes, plus rice and pickles)
  • The food series (3 articles) is complete! You've mastered 60 food-related kanji — enough to dine confidently across Japan

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