Summary:ehr
Japanese cuisine may be one of the most popular cuisines worldwide. In about every city in the entire world there is at least one Japanese restaurant, if not more. Usually, for a specific cuisine to cling in people's life like Japanese cuisine did, a certain originality in taste has to exist, and Japanese cuisine has it. The ideal Japanese meals are sushi, rice, and Yakisoba (fried noodles), those three were directly affected by the Japan's geographical features. Japan, located off the East coast of Asia, is an archipelago nation comprised of four main islands, from North to South: Hokkaido, Honshu, Kyushu, Shikoku, and over 3500 smaller islands. Mountains occupy over 80% of Japan's landmass, in which 186 of them are volcanoes; about sixty of them are active. Though living next to a volcano includes a maintaining risk of eruption, the volcanoes in Japan can be seen in a positive point of view on general. With all defaults, volcanoes can become a huge plus, considering the rich soil they leave surrounding themselves. The soil around volcanoes has many vitamins and is very nutritious, leaving the crops grow around the volcano as never seen before. This geographical feature, the volcanoes, has effected dearly on the Japanese cuisine. Beside the volcanoes, Japan's location has too played a major role in the creation of Japanese cuisine. Japan, from one hand, is in the Northern Hampshire, which means it has a similar weather to North America and Europe; cold to freezing winters with snow. With that weather on several regions, tropical weather exists too in Japan, due to the south area, which is closely located to the equator. Another factor and may be the main factor, which influenced the formation of Japanese cuisine may be the fact that Japan itself is an island, and is surrounded all around by sea. Rice, eaten daily in Japanese culture, is a plant grown only in warm weather with lots of rain.
Japanese Cuisine- unique gastronomy Originally published in Shvoong: http://www.shvoong.com/humanities/484541-japanese-cuisine-unique-gastronomy/