"Bentō": A Feast for the Eyes and Stomach

Power Lunch at Japanese Schools

Society Lifestyle

Michael Schauerte [Profile]

School lunch in Japan is about more than just providing kids with a nutritious and tasty meal; another aim is to foster healthy eating habits that will benefit them throughout life. An American editor at Nippon.com traveled to Hirayama Elementary School, on the western edge of Tokyo, to learn more about school lunch in Japan.

Lunchtime Learning


Students in Takagi Kenji’s first-grade class transport lunch from the kitchen to their classroom.

Kawaguchi and her coworkers emphasize how school lunch in Japan is about more than just providing students with a healthy meal every day. School lunch programs are also an integral part of nurturing healthy eating habits among students and preserving some of the outstanding aspects of Japanese culinary culture.

The need to encourage children to eat well-balanced meals is more important than ever in Japan now that fast-food restaurants and convenience stores have popped up in so many places. The fact that Japan has yet to be hit hard by the childhood obesity epidemic that is sweeping many other economically developed nations may be thanks, in no small part, to the healthy school lunches, which account for nearly one third of students’ meals.

Another effort underway at Hirayama Elementary School is to include many rice-centered Japanese meals on the menu. Not only do such lunches tend to be healthy, but serving them helps to preserve a valuable part of Japan’s food culture. For earlier generations, such dishes would have been served regularly at home, but for many students these days school has become the primary place to encounter traditional cuisine.

Talking to Kawaguchi gives me a clear sense of how dedicated head nutritionists in Japan are to creating a positive ripple effect throughout society by fostering healthier eating habits and preserving valuable aspects of the nation’s food culture.

Kitchen Cooperation

I have to let Kawaguchi and the others get back to kitchen because the time has come for the actual cooking to begin, but through the glass partition I can watch them work. Each person has a different task to perform, making use of the enormous multipurpose steel pots installed in the kitchen. One of the toughest jobs on this particular day is to fry the tuna. Not only is it hot work, but the internal temperature of the tuna has to be carefully checked with a thermometer to ensure food safety.

Even though everything in the kitchen is enormous, the basic approach is not all that different from cooking at home, using the same sorts of ingredients and seasonings. Unlike home cooking, though, the sheer size and quantity of everything means that the cooks get a real workout, wielding giant utensils that look like props from the 1980s movie Honey, I Shrank the Kids.

Preparing lunch requires not only muscle power but also teamwork, and it is impressive to see how efficiently the kitchen crew work together. This is especially apparent when it comes time to dish everything out—a task made trickier because of the different class sizes and the need to provide older students with larger portions than those of younger students. The men in charge expertly divvy up everything into the various trays and containers, and finish with a few minutes to spare before the kids arrive to haul off today’s lunch to the classrooms where students eat lunch.

Dishing It Out

A system is in place to handle the “distribution” of lunch. Each day different classes are designated, on a rotating basis, to take the food from the kitchen to the classrooms. Then, around half dozen students from each class handle the task of dividing up everything into individual portions for their classmates. This system, which is the same throughout Japan, is not only efficient but also can be a good way to foster students’ sense of responsibility.

I head off to a first-grade classroom to get a close-up view of the system in action. The students in charge, dressed adorably in white caps and aprons, are busy dishing out the soup, rice, tuna, and side dish. They have chalked up several months of experience at this task, since entering school back in April, so they are able to handle everything quite well.

The trickiest job on this day is to spoon out the soup, but apart from a few drops here or there nearly all of it finds its way safely into the students’ bowls. The first-graders’ teacher, Takagi Kenji, is standing nearby to lend a hand if needed, wearing a fetching Mickey Mouse apron. And I hear one girl, in a chirpy voice, remind her classmate to give him a nice large portion.

Once the food has been divided up, the students put their hands together and yell out a collective itadakimasu to show appreciation for the food and signal that it is time to chow down. I take this as my cue to head upstairs to visit a classroom of older students.

The Clean Plate Class


Fifth-grade teacher Ichinose Hideomi makes a point of encouraging his students to eat every last bite of their lunches.


The fifth-grade students have once again polished off everything on the menu.

I end up in the fifth-grade class of Ichinose Hideomi, an athletic-looking teacher whose hearty appetite seems to have worn off on his students. While his class finishes dishing out everything, Ichinose tells me that he emphasizes the importance of not wasting any of the food served at lunch. He also makes a point of encouraging proper table manners, which in Japan includes not only keeping your elbows off the table and sitting up straight, but also holding your chopsticks properly and taking a bite of each dish in rotation rather than polishing off one dish at a time.

After the food is served, I notice that some students are staking their claim to some of the leftovers. They play a quick round of janken (rock-paper-scissors) to decide who gets what. I am sorely tempted, now that my breakfast is but a distant memory, to run over and join their competition.

Instead, I ask Ichinose how he makes sure that his students don’t waste any food. He says, half-jokingly, that he took the initiative by eating a lot himself. Gradually the kids responded to his challenge, leading to the heated janken battles for the leftovers I was witnessing. He is proud that his students have built up a record of no wasted food that stretches back for several months.

At this point, my stomach irritably intervenes to ask me why it hasn’t been fed, so I let the teacher enjoy his lunch and head back down to the principal’s office.

I open the office door and am relieved to see a school lunch has been placed on the table for me. And it is well worth the wait! The meals might be created with the students in mind, but they taste very good to this adult. The tuna is lovely, the vegetables a crunchy delight, and the soup really hits the spot.

As I leave to head home after lunch my only regret is that I won’t be able to stop by again later in the week to sample the curry with summer vegetables which is on the menu. Too bad they don’t deliver.

 (Originally written in English. Photographs by Katō Takemi.)













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Michael SchauerteView article list

Translator and editor (and occasional writer), Nippon.com. Graduated from Kenyon College in 1991 with a degree in French literature. Has lived in Japan since arriving in 1995 on the JET Program. Received a master’s degree in social science from Hitotsubashi University in 2001. After stints at the Society for Testing English Proficiency (EIKEN) and a translation agency, joined Japan Echo Inc. in 2010.

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