Why Is Japanese Pizza Covered in Mayonnaise? (The “Wafu” Italian Revolution)

Share This Article

The Italian Obsession

Japan loves Italian food. There are thousands of Italian restaurants and cheap, wildly popular family restaurant chains (like Saizeriya) across the country. But Japanese chefs didn’t just copy traditional recipes from Rome; they completely evolved them to fit local tastes.

The “Wafu” Pasta

Sponsored Link

This is the birth of “Wafu” (Japanese-style) Italian. Instead of just tomato and basil, Japanese chefs started tossing spaghetti with soy sauce, butter, and uniquely Japanese ingredients. Today, pasta topped with spicy “Mentaiko” (cod roe), raw squid, Shiso leaves, or sour Umeboshi (pickled plum) are massive national staples.

👉 Fascinated by Japan’s unique food culture?
Read Next:https://japanupmagazine.com/archives/20057

The Wild Pizza Toppings

But the real culture shock happens when you order a pizza. Forget simple pepperoni. In Japan, standard pizza delivery menus feature wild toppings like Teriyaki Chicken, Korean Yakiniku beef, sweet Mochi, and the absolute favorite: Shrimp and Corn covered in a heavy zig-zag of Japanese Mayonnaise.

The Comfort Food Fusion

Italian purists might faint looking at these menus, but to Japanese people, it isn’t about being authentic. It is about creating the ultimate, savory comfort food. The umami-rich flavors of soy sauce and mayonnaise pair unbelievably well with baked dough and cheese.

The LA Equivalent

If this sounds crazy, remember that California Pizza Kitchen invented the “BBQ Chicken Pizza” right here in LA! Wafu Italian is the exact same brilliant concept. The next time you are in Japan, skip the Margherita and embrace the glorious chaos of a Teriyaki Mayo Pizza!

▼ Read Next:

🔗https://japanupmagazine.com/archives/19844

 
 

 

.

.

Share This Article

READ NEW MAGAZINE