Ketchup fried rice under a blanket of soft omelette.

What it is

Omurice is ketchup-seasoned chicken fried rice wrapped in a thin omelette — a star of yoshoku, Japan's homegrown Western-style cooking. Modern versions drape a barely-set, custardy omelette over the rice and finish it with demi-glace or cream sauce.

What it means

Born in early-20th-century Tokyo and Osaka, omurice is nostalgia on a plate — a childhood favorite and a diner classic. Some chefs make a theatrical tornado (tatsumaki) omelette, sliced open at the table to spill across the rice.

Why it's wonderful

Comfort in its purest form: tangy-sweet rice, silky egg, a glossy sauce. It's warm, familiar and quietly perfect — and unmistakably a Japanese invention, not a Western one.

What to order

  • Classic ketchup omurice
  • Demi-glace or cream sauce
  • Tornado (tatsumaki) omelette
  • With a side salad

For special diets

Egg and rice; usually chicken, but vegetable versions exist. Contains egg and often butter/dairy.

Where to try it — and book a table

Hand-picked spots for this dish, each with a working reservation link. Tap to book.

Kichijoji · Yoshoku / omurice · ¥¥

Rasupuru

Rasupuru-style omurice

A 1972-founded Kichijoji yoshoku institution tucked in a station-side basement, beloved for its tender house-style omurice.

  • Casual
  • Solo

Ginza · Vegan cafe / plant-based · ¥¥

2foods Ginza Loft

Plant-based omurice

An all-vegan cafe inside Ginza Loft turning guilt-free junk food — omurice, nuggets and donuts — into something you'd never guess was plant-based.

  • Vegetarian
  • Vegan
  • Casual
  • Solo

Ginza · Yoshoku & Japanese curry · ¥¥

Ginza Swiss

Katsu curry ('Chiba-san's Cutlet Curry')

The 1947 Ginza institution that invented katsu curry itself, plating a crisp pork cutlet over rich Western-style curry at the very spot where the dish was born.

  • Casual
  • Solo

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