Rice is the staff of life for the Japanese and many Asian countries. Learn about its long historical significance and impact on the Japanese.
Rice is an intrinsic part of Japanese cuisine and culture, eaten daily in Japanese homes (traditionally, for every meal!) There are also religious customs and festivals deeply rooted in rice cultivation.
A glimpse into the history shows that rice is more than a mere foodstuff. Rice provides nourishment and has played a vital role in Japan’s development into the country known today. In this three-part series on rice and Japan, let’s first delve into the history of Japanese rice.
Table of contents
Meaning of Rice
Linguistically, rice is synonymous with the meal. ‘Cooked rice’ or gohan (ご飯) is a meal. When your mom says, “It’s Gohan!” it means “It’s time to eat!”
Breakfast, lunch, and dinner are respectively Asa-gohan (朝ご飯), Hiru-gohan (昼ご飯), and Ban-gohan (晩ご飯), ingraining a bowl of rice at every meal.
The Early History of Rice Cultivation
Rice is believed to have been first cultivated in southern China or somewhere in eastern Asia 10,000 years ago and introduced to Japan from China or Korea. The earliest record of rice cultivation in Japan dates back to the late Jomon era (around 400 BC) in the southern island of Kyushu.
Its cultivation gradually spread across the country, where hunter-gatherers became agrarian societies formed around rice farming. The Itazuke archeological site (板付遺跡) in Fukuoka prefecture is the earliest settlement where excavations revealed rice paddy fields, irrigation channels for diverting river water, and storage for rice.
Rice cultivation requires communal effort and cannot be done alone. It is a labor-intensive task involving many steps, where fellow farmers pool their manpower to share water resources, ward off pests, and help each other with planting and harvesting the crops. This necessitated an emphasis on collective group interest and formed community groups called Yui (結), which became the foundation of Japanese society.
Even though only a tiny percentage of the Japanese population are rice farmers today, the Japanese continue to sustain group harmony in the relatively small island nation. Thus, Japanese society’s group consciousness and consensus-seeking mindset can be traced back to rice cultivation.
Rice as the Life-Blood of Government and Society
Over time, rice became a tool of control and dominance. Rice signaled wealth and was used to rank one’s social status among the upper elites.
From the 7th century to the Edo period (1603-1868), the peasant class was forced to pay taxes to the feudal lords in the form of rice, and the samurai received their salary in rice, which they sold the excess for cash.
The Tokugawa Shogunate taxed the feudal lords based on their administration’s total economic yield and territories. Kokudaka (石高) is the annual yield value of land, which was measured in rice where one koku (一石) was the equivalent of enough rice to feed one adult man for a year (roughly 150kg of rice).
The historic city of Kanazawa, under the rule of the Maeda clan, was the wealthiest clan in feudal Japan, second only to the Tokugawa Shogunate. The Maeda clan had an accumulated net worth of one million koku (百万石; 1 million koku = 5 million bushels/48 million gallons of rice) and rightfully earned the nickname Kaga Hyakumangoku (加賀百万石; Kaga was the name of the territory). The lavish and beautiful temples, castles, and historic buildings of Kanazawa are a testament to the Maeda clan’s vast economic power.
The Earliest Japanese Banking System
As mentioned, the samurai and feudal lords were paid rice, not cash. The uneaten rest was exchanged for currency since one cannot sustain on rice alone. This sparked the emergence of independent brokers, money changers, and rice markets, which played a crucial role in establishing the early modern banking system and the advancement of a currency-based economy.
While Edo (modern-day Tokyo) was the political capital during the Edo era, Osaka was the trade and commercial epicenter due to its pivotal location as a port city smack in the middle of the country.
Rice and other foodstuffs and goods collected by feudal domains were shipped to Osaka and then sold to brokers through auctions in exchange for paper money. The rice and goods were shipped to feed the hungry Edo capital, which by 1700 had grown into the world’s largest city, boasting a population of over a million.
The Dojima Rice Exchange
The Dojima Rice Exchange (堂島米市場) in Osaka was established in 1697 and later officially authorized by the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1730. By 1710, the world’s first futures trading on rice transactions, Nobemai (延米), was born.
What set Dojima apart from other world markets was that the nation’s monetary transactions were handled through these powerful and independent merchants of Dojima. They managed the bank accounts and financial transactions for many feudal lords and samurai while the Shogunate struggled to regulate them.
Dojima flourished for over 300 years until it was reorganized, then dissolved by the Japanese government in 1939 and replaced by the Government Rice Agency.
White Rice for All?
As removing the rice bran was labor-intensive, white rice was mainly reserved for the upper class. The lower classes subsisted on brown rice, other grains such as wheat and millet, and starches such as potatoes.
It wasn’t until the Meiji era (1868-1912) that the industrialization of rice processing made white rice available and affordable to the masses. White rice was scarce again during the food shortages during and post-WWII.
The circumstance was countered by the U.S. occupying forces’ push for a wheat-based diet. American aid (and also propaganda) in the form of wheat flooded Japan, where the rice-dependent population grudgingly incorporated more wheat into their diet to offset the rice scarcity. School lunches served bread instead of rice to mold the younger generation’s dietary preferences. The soldiers and returnees from Manchuria (northern China) brought wheat noodles and gyoza, popularized among the hungry population (more on Chuka Ryori, Japanese-Chinese cuisine).
Fearing that the population would completely shift to a wheat-based diet, the Japanese government and various interest groups campaigned for the return to a rice diet in the 1970s. But rice consumption never returned to the prewar era.
Rice Today
In recent years, per-capita rice consumption has declined due to the shrinking population. This can be attributed to the diverse side dishes currently served at a Japanese meal (一汁三菜) compared to the Edo era, the shift to a Westernized diet, the availability of other cuisines, improvement in economic conditions, and the surging popularity of a low carbohydrate diet, which has exacerbated the decline of the rice heavy meal.
Despite all these factors, rice cultivation remains heavily subsidized by the Japanese government. The government implemented a rice tariff scheme in 1999 to protect the domestic rice industry and support Japanese food security. The flood of cheap imported rice and lowered tariffs was a concern of national security interests and threatened a solid national identity ingrained in rice.
However, multiple attempts have been made by major rice growers such as the U.S., Thailand, and Australia to negotiate lower tariffs to make way for their rice exports. Thus, in 2017, Japan imported USD$358.3 million in rice, where 58% was from the U.S., 39% was from Thailand, and 1.9% was from Australia.
Japan was the third-largest export market for the U.S. rice industry that year. Japan also imports rice products such as rice flour, crackers, and noodles from Thailand, China, the U.S., and Vietnam.
These days, you can purchase California-grown Calrose rice and other short-grain rice from Australia and China at Japanese supermarkets. The stigma against imported rice is gradually waning, although many Japanese people prefer domestic rice, even if the price is higher.
Part 2 will uncover how rice plays an essential role in Japanese culture through religion, mythology, and customs.
Is rice a staple food in your country? How did rice play an essential part in your culture’s history? How do you eat Japanese rice? Please share in the comment box below!
This was so fascinating! I appreciate you sharing the knowledge.
Hello Lisa, thank you for reading and for your kind words!
Kayoko, your article on rice in Japan is very interesting. I live on rice and for me not eating rice after 3 days I start going into withdrawals- lol. But jokes aside, we loved the rice when we were on a trip in Japan.
Hi Juli, I can’t go without eating rice as well…which makes it difficult when traveling to non-rice eating countries 😀
Kayako, this looks like an excellent term paper on Japanese rice history. You’ve already covered a lot of different angles in the first part. Anxiously waiting for the remaining two parts to see what is in them.
Hi Thomas! Researching and writing on this topic did bring back my college days of frantically writing assignments 😀 Thank you so much and yes, please stay tuned!
Looking at Amazon I see some rice varieties are very expensive and some are quite inexpensive. What is unique about these varieties of rice that are so much higher in price? I am intrigued by this difference. Thank you!
Hello John, thanks for your question! The price can be due to its origin (imported from Japan, grown in the U.S., etc), processing, or brands. I’ll be addressing the different varieties of rice in part 3, so please stay tuned!
This was so interesting to read, as someone who is interested in Japan’s history, this article really caught my interest! Thank you for posting this!
Hi Megumi, thank you for reading and hope you’ll enjoy part 2 on the cultural aspect of rice!
Great history lesson. I love rice dishes and use all kinds of rice but mostly Japanese white rice. Thanks for the information.
Hello Susan, thank you for your comment! Glad to hear that this was helpful!
Kayako-san,
I had never previously thought about the history of rice but I’m glad that you wrote this. It is very interesting and I’m looking forward to the next parts. I love short grained rice with just about anything, even with spaghetti, or only tsukemono.
Hello Dan san, thank you for reading and for your kind words! Parts 2 and 3 will be up soon…so please stay tuned! I can’t agree more, short grain rice goes along with pretty much anything! (spaghetti?!)
I enjoyed this history lesson on rice. My husband and I are sansei and grew up with rice for dinner every day, except in my family, we did not serve rice at Thanksgiving as we had mashed potatoes. That changed when my husband came to Thanksgiving dinner for the first time at my house and asked my mom “where’s the rice”? LOL! She made sure to have rice for him with any meal we had and totally spoiled him!
Hi Annie, thank you for sharing your rice story! Hahaha, my father-in-law is the same as your husband, a meal without rice is unfulfilling for him!
Thank you for all of your informative e-mails and especially links to good information like this.
Hi Jamie, on behalf of the JOC team thank you for reading our content!
Thank you thinking of including lessons on Japan in your emails.
D
Hi James, thank you for reading 😀
I did not grow up in a rice eating culture. Rice for me growing up was considered a delicacy and only served on special occasions. I grew up with Risotto, Nasi Goreng and yellow curry over rice with fried bananas on the side 😊. I always loved rice in all its transformative glory. And today a bowl of rice and miso soup is nowadays my comfort food. I absolutely love rice. Thank you so much for this post. I can’t wait to read more.
Hi Stefania, thank you for sharing your rice story! I agree, a bowl of rice and miso soup is comfort food. Please stay tuned for parts 2 and 3, should be out soon!
Thank you for this wonderful write-up. I’m S E Asian (Singaporean) but have called Canada home for the last 13 years. Still very much into rice eating culture. We always have three types of rice in our pantry – Basmati rice, Japanese rice and Thai rice. Basmati for Biryani and Pulao, Japanese rice for Korean and Japanese dishes and Thai rice eaten with Malay and Chinese dishes. Each of them having their own unique taste and we love them all.
Hi Rmahmud, thank you for your comment! Yes, I agree that each variety of Asian rice is best for that particular cuisine! I stock up on long grain rice as well, although I consume Japanese rice the most 😝
Love all of your historical stories and photos.
Hello Helga, thank you so much! The photos are not mine, some are taken by Nami and other images/photos are free images from the web.
A very interesting post! I love rice and will definitely look for Japanese rice for our sushi dishes and cooking at home. Thank you.
Hi Tracey, thank you for reading! Good luck with your search for Japanese rice! Please stay tuned for part 3 where I’ll discuss the varieties of Japanese rice!
very interesting article; I love rice so much!!!arigato gozaimashita Kayoko san
Hello Ariane san! Thanks for reading and for your kind comment 🙂