These Japanese Fast Food Chains Will Make You Love Fast Food Again

Mmmm. Japanese Fast Food. You already know how superior McDonalds in Japan is, but did you know Japan is full of their own Japanese fast food chains (rather than just the upgraded, cleaned up American ones)? Although I can’t cover them all, I wanted to go over the best Japanese fast food chains in Japan so you can get your eat on in a pinch while you’re over there. Actually, some of these have even made their way over to the United States and other parts of the world – which ones are they? What makes each of these fast food chains so delicious? Read on to find out.

Japanese Fast Food Chains In Japan

Now, when we talk about fast food chains in Japan, I don’t mean imported fast food chains like McDonalds, KFC, Burger King and so on. I’m talking about home-grown fast food, where some Japanese person was inspired by the speed, unhealthiness and cheapness of a Big Mac, and said “hey, I want to do that too, but Japanese style.”

Sometimes that means creating something that’s not-Japanese (food-wise) but then making it Japanese (style, culture, and so on-wise). Alternatively, it can also mean someone took something Japanese (food-wise) and just made it faster and cheaper. Doesn’t matter.

I’m going to go over my “favorite” (and I say “favorite” in quotes because I’m not particularly a fan of any of these places, or any fast food in general) Japanese Fast Food Chains and share the cool stuff about them. Let’s start with delicious hamburgers.

MOS Burger (モスバーガー)

MOS Burger’s motto is “Making people happy through food.” So, if you’re depressed and eating food makes you feel better MOS Burger was, like, totally made for you. You pronounce it like “Moss” Burger, so it’s not actually a burger joint owned by a “Mo” (at least, not that I know of). Actually, the MOS stands for “Mountain Ocean Sun” … which I suppose are three things that tend to make a lot of people happy. It’s Japan’s second largest fast food franchise, only behind (you guessed it) McDonalds.

One thing I’ve noticed about MOS Burger is their burgers. They’re freakishly perfect looking, especially on the menu. Normally you see the menu and think… “okay, it’s not going to look like this in real life.”

But, when you get a MOS Burger in real life, they’re kind of suspiciously nice looking… Not perfect like the menu, for sure, but still very shapely.

Most Burger In Real Life

Their menu includes things like Hamburgers, hot dogs, rice dishes, and (my favorite) MOS Rice Burgers, where instead of having a bun made of bread, you have a bun made of rice.

MOS Rice Burger With Kalbi

MOS Rice Burger With Kalbi

If there isn’t any rice anywhere, it’s not really Japanese. I’ve never actually had a MOS Rice Burger, but just thinking about it in my mouth makes me hungry. Looking at the other Rice Burgers, I think they’ve picked good insides that match rice well. Not all that strange when you think about it in terms of loose rice. This rice bun just makes eating it faster and more convenient. [MOS Burger's Website]

Sukiya (すき家)

Oh how I love you so, Sukiya. This place serves gyuudon (beef on rice), kind of like Yoshinoya (see below), though I’d say they do a better job at it (just my preference, Yoshinoya’s all kinds of awesome too). While they have the standard beef-bowl combination (i.e. beef, onion, ginger, rice), they also have plenty of other tasty options as well. Though they don’t look anything like this in real life, the commercial below will give you an idea.

[yframe url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FoEf3o292JE&feature=related']

Mmm, looks delicious, right? And, like many Japanese fast food places, Sukiya is open 24hrs a day. It’s such a perfect place to pop in at four in the morning after you’ve been working all night. Nice and warm and goes nicely with some tea.

Sukiya Traditional

There are over 1,000 Sukiya restaurants in Japan and some in China and Brazil as well. Their motto is “Save Time And Money.” Now there’s something (delicious) I can live by. [Sukiya's Website]

First Kitchen (ファーストキッチン)

First Kitchen

First Kitchen, owned by Suntory (they make beer and soft drinks, mostly), is a fast food chain in Japan that is mostly concentrated around the Kanto region of Japan (that’s the prefectures around Tokyo). They serve burgers (most popular, apparently, is the Bacon Egg Burger, which sounds amazing because it has bacon in the name), fried chicken, pasta, pizza, and more.

They’re pretty standard in terms of American-Fast-Food-Turned-Japanese places go. There are interesting (but kind of normal) things like croquette burgers, shrimp burgers, and katsu burgers.

The most interesting about First Kitchen, I think, is probably its name, which, when shortened, comes out to “ファッキン” (fakkin)… They’re apparently pushing for people to use the abbreviation FK instead, because Fakkin sounds nothing like First Kitchen and a lot like some other word I can’t think of at the moment. [First Kitchen's Website]

Yoshinoya (吉野家)

yoshinoya

You can’t write an overview of Japanese Fast Food Chains without including Yoshinoya. Yoshinoya (like Sukiya) is a gyuudon (beef bowl) place. There’s a special place in my heart for Yoshinoya – it’s fed me many-a-late-nights and also many-a-not-late-days.

Seriously highly recommend cracking an egg into your gyuudon – makes things 10x better.

There are several things that set Yoshinoya apart. First, there are some in America, so you have a chance to find it (though, I gotta say, doesn’t feel the same to me). Second, compared to other places, they’ve been around a really really long time (1899).

[yframe url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1e-HPMpxdc']

One interesting thing about them is that in 2003, when Japan stopped importing American beef because of Mad Cow Disease scares, they stopped serving their beef bowls (that’s like, their main bowl! 0_o). People lined up in giant lines (that’s what Japanese people do for fun, line up) to get one last taste of wonderful beef goodness before they switched over to pork. Finally, in 2006 they were able to get American beef back again, and all of Japan celebrated (because, who wouldn’t?).

Oh, and if you go to a Yoshinoya, stack up on the ginger. It’s free and delicious. Yum. [Yoshinoya's Website]

Coco Ichiban Curry (CoCo壱番)

Like Japanese curry and want it fast? Like your curry with lots of stuff, like natto, tonkatsu, and chicken, in it? Well, have no fear, Coco Ichiban Curry is here.

Personally, I can’t get enough Japanese Curry (it’s so easy for a terrible cook such as myself to make). I only put boring things like onions, carrots, and sometimes meat in mine, though. The first time I went to Coco Ichiban I was amazed by all the options. I think I got a combination of katsu and croquette – it was giant and awesome.

There are a bunch of these in Japan as well as some others around Asia and California/Hawaii. But, if you’re looking to get a quick curry fix, Coco Ichiban is your place. Just don’t be overwhelmed by all the available options. [Coco Ichibanya's Website]

Pizza-La (ピザーラ)

Now THAT’S a crust

Pizza-La is the most successful pizza company in Japan… but when I say “Pizza” don’t think I’m talking about the stuff you’re used to. Japanese pizza has “different” ingredients. I’m not saying they’re bad… in fact, they’re delicious… but there are a lot of ingredients you probably aren’t used to.

[yframe url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTP04NuIJWM']

Shrimp Mayonnaise

[yframe url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X8L-XuW4_-8']

Crab

[yframe url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkoMcXplQMQ']

Roast Chicken, Mozzarella, & Lemon

[yframe url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xUgJ9hEufGU']

Bob Sapp flavored / SUPER Italian

Anyways, those sound pretty good, right? Other pizzas include Bulgogi, several things with mayo, hot dogs, and all the normal pizza things I’m not mentioning because you’ve seen it before. Their motto is “All the taste and toppings you want on a pizza, straight from our oven to your door!” and their mascot is a person with a pizza for a head. He makes good faces.

pizza la kun

There’s just no “neutral” when it comes to Pizza-La-kun. [Pizza-La's website]

Ichiran Ramen (一蘭ラーメン)

Delicious fast-food ramen. Even though Ichiran is pretty close to fast-food status, I don’t think I’ve ever had ramen outside of Japan that’s as good as this stuff. It’s tasty – not something I’d compare with McDonalds or something like that, despite calling it “Fast Food.” Maybe it’s the nostalgia, but if I had to choose any Japanese fast-food place, this would be the one.

At Ichiran Ramen, you sit in solitude. You’re in a booth, and it’s just you and your ramen.

To buy the ramen, you don’t even have to talk to anyone either. Just go to the machine, pay there, and turn in the ticket it spits out.

You can concentrate 100% on your (awesome) ramen. If you finish your noodles but want more, just put your plate on the button in front of you and a bell will ring in the back. Someone will grab your bowl and fill it with some more noodles as long as you still have the soup to go with them, making it a pseudo-all-you-can-eat style place.

Now, I know it’s not supposed to be fun eating alone, but I think that’s because most places make you feel bad (i.e. most tables are a table for at least two, if not more people). This place is made for being alone which gets rid of the guilt and the judging. Just you and wonderful ramen.

Let’s Not Forget…

There are plenty of other Japanese Fast Food Chains that exist that I haven’t added to the list. There are probably some that I’ve totally missed (whoops) – but, here are some I didn’t really want to talk about a lot but ought to be on the list, along with a little about them.

Beard Papa’s is a dessert place, so I’m not sure if it counts as fast food, but it’s fast, and it’s food, so we’re going to include it. Their focus is cream puffs, and they’re located all over the world (most of their stores are in Japan, though). You definitely have a pretty good chance to find this place in your own country though, at least compared to some of the other Japanese fast food joints.

Becker’s is owned and operated by JR (that’s Japan Railways, the people who do a lot of the train stuff in Japan). I’m guessing they thought “hey, we got tons of people coming into our stations on trains, I bet they’re hungry for burgers” so then they just made a burger place. They’re all about freshness here, too – if a bun gets more than 1.5 hours old, they toss it (so wasteful, though!). Still, it’s pretty tasty.

Freshness Burger, as you can probably tell by the name, is also all about freshness. They stress the organic / fresh ingredients side of things, which is what differentiates them from the other burger fast food joints out there.

Lotteria Just another fast food burger chain – there isn’t much that differentiates it from the other places, though it tastes fine, and I’d rather go here than McDonalds (though, McDonalds Japan is kinda good).

Pepper Lunch is a “fast-steak” fast-food restaurant in Japan and Asia that has a pretty interesting cooking method. The founder, Kunio Ichinose, wanted to make a place that served high quality fast food that didn’t require a chef (cheaper and faster that way, I guess). They use metal plates that are heated to 500 degrees Fahrenheit by an electromagnetic cooker. The meat, vegetables, and other things get cooked and the customer decides when to eat them.

What Will You NomNomNom?

Now, I’m sure there are a bunch of other Japanese fast-food places I’m missing, but I’m pretty sure those are the main ones. Which ones caught your fancy? Which ones made you hungry? For me, it was definitely having to remember Ichiran Ramen and it’s deliciousness (I’m writing this at dinner time, arrghsddjkfd).

One thing I do know, though… writing this article reminds me how terrible most American fast food chains are. Where are our standards? :(

P.S. If you’re “hungry” for more, you should follow Tofugu on Twitter.
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  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    haha, that name must not do it justice ~ I would have never thought!

    I’m always disappointed in Portland Ramen… I thought Mirakutei was okay… Biwa’s sometimes good, though I’ve had it go both ways, so I’m not sure yet. Wasn’t impressed with Shigezo even though a friend said it was “the best ramen in portland.” Couple of new supposedly good places opened up recently, though, right? I can’t remember what they are at the moment…

    Oh, and Yuzu is awesome, though that’s sort of the Beav. Go there if you haven’t yet!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Mos Burger → Haha, you summed it up perfect
    Freshness Burger → One of the few I haven’t tried :( Will have to try it next time!
    Lotteria → Owned by Korean company (Lotte) but founded in Japan, so I let the Koreanness slide… for now… dun dun dunnn.

    P.S. Hey man, long time no see! :D

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    whaaatttt, don’t like bacon!? Unfathomable D:

    Rice burgers are cool, though… they’d do better with bacon! dun dun dunnnnn.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    mmmm, soba’s delicious!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Yeah, I’ve never been impressed with American Yoshinoya :( Just not the same…

    Totally missed GogoCurry – will do a revision later when I get all the things I missed together :/

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Aww :( I’m sure if they knew it was about Beard Papa they’d have understood

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Yeah – lots of these make their way to Korea / China / Taiwan … cool to hear they stand up! It’s only when they come to America that they lower in quality and stop tasting as good :( We have such low standards, here :(

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Agreed!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    gooo goooo – get to your Sukiya, quick!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Finding vegetarian in Japan is sooooo hard :( You folks are definitely not catered to at all (though if you can eat fish you might make it).

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    haha, yeah, natto anything :(

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Is Matsuya a fast food chain?

  • mashimaro7

    Hmm, maybe it’s only in Osaka, but I did see a lot of Hokka Hokkas!

  • Scott

    You left out my favorite takoyaki chain,  Gindako !!
    And you should see the crazy things coming out of McD’s lately: Like the KBQ (Korean BBQ Burger), Gurakoro (croquette) sandwich, and my favorite: the McTuna muffin.

  • http://www.vietamins.com Viet

    Korean BBQ Burger? Is it anything like the Bulgogi burger they serve in their Korean McDs? Burger was pretty tasty.

  • Scott

    The KBQ is basically a quarter pounder with a few thin slices of bulgogi on top. Speaking of.. Subway has a pretty good bulgogi sandwich. There’s a big Korean food fad in Japan right now. I hope it sticks.

  • http://twitter.com/jomann Joseph Lindsay

    Now I’m hungry.

  • http://monrabu.blogspot.com Monica Ai (桃仁香・愛)

    Hmm I thought it was.  It was the only gyuudon place near my Uni

  • KiaiFighter

    Yes, I live right beside a matsuya! I love that place. Mostly because of convenience, but the gyuudon is damn good too. They also have pork bowls and curry sets which rock.

    I can’t believe you’ve never tried matsuya koichi!

    http://www.matsuyafoods.co.jp/

  • Daviekun

    I’ve been to all of these places with the exception of Pizza-La. They are all quite delicious, but I am both surprised and saddened to see that Tenya is not on this list…

    http://www.tenya.co.jp/index.htm

  • Anonymous

    I do like bacon. I just don’t like eggs or burgers. At work I prefer to snack on pepperoni or sausage before bacon though. Or cheese. Mmmmmm, mozzarella goodness.

    I suppose rice burgers are just different to me. I don’t like buns or tomatos or mustard, and I’m picky about cheese. There wouldn’t be much left to eat. Plus I’m not a fan of hamburger patties either. That rice burger fixes all that.

  • Brandon Inoue

    Pepper Lunch FTW!

    I’ve had the yakiniku rice burger.  Tastier than regular fast food but I
    think the Rice needed to be seared a little more.  It fell apart!

    I really do miss Japanese Fast Food.  Everyone has their favorite Gyuudon place.  Mine was Matsuya.

  • John

    I flew JAL once but the flight was too short for a meal :(

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    so I think what you’re trying to say is… if MOS burger made a rice bun with bacon, sausage, & pepperoni in it, you’d be in heaven? :P

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    ooh, nice! Another to add to the ever growing list of missed fast food places!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    don’t be sad! I’m collecting all the ones I missed for a future revision!

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    Right? I had a hard time reading this post without watering at the mouth a little bit.

  • http://twitter.com/Sarsa_Eric Eric Evangelista

    Layla what do you think about Sao Paulo Sukiya quality standard? The last four times I’ve been there the service was hopeless. Yes, I know, four times even with bad services. Beef addiction. :-) On 23th I should arrive in Tokyo, so let’s try all these delicious options. Tofugu: Better than Michelin Restaurant Guide. :D

  • Fan of IT Crowd

    It certainly is Moss, the character from that British sit com which I am a fan of.. ~_~ Looking forward to trying a Mos Burger http://watchtheitcrowd.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/the-it-crowd-moss_412x232.jpg

  • Anonymous

    Exactly! :P

  • Anonymous

    Exactly! :P

  • http://monrabu.blogspot.com Monica Ai (桃仁香・愛)

    Oh, thank goodness. I thought
    they might have gotten rid of it or something. :P

  • http://twitter.com/fembassist Jenny

    I love Pepper Lunch. Hard to find though. Oh, I agree with Koichi that finding vegetarian or even vegan places are extremely difficult, but I have seen a few restaurants in the popular foreigner areas that serve this type of menu. You’ll have to google it to find it.

    The one beef I have with McDonalds is they don’t serve the larger salads like you can get in the states. Their Big America burgers were wonderful though. Who knew that the Japanese could best capture American themes?

  • http://hgsasaki.com Scott

    So true about the large salads. And most salads I come across are made with cabbage instead of lettuce. Guess it’s easier to just make your own.  

    There’s also lots of Indian restaurants around the Kanto region.. another vegan option. 

  • irmoony

    Jesus Christ, those burgers look bigger than anything I’d be able to put in my mouth

  • JakesVersus

    There is an Ichiran Ramen is opening in Brooklyn soon.

  • JakesVersus

    Wow.. english much? Try to forget about that second “is”.

  • Drew Mitchell

    Thanks! Mind = blown.

  • Obliviousboy1o6

    dude where’s Nakau and Matsuya? lol

  • Bruce Smith

    If you don’t like raw eggs then best you forget about Japan ;-)

  • Bruce Smith

    One of the things I really miss about Japan is Yoshinoya. Cheap, filling and delicious. Magic !

  • Bruce Smith

    Crikey ! Well spotted !

  • Anonymous

    Beard Papa, Mos Burger and Pepper Lunch = YUM YUM YUM! Yoshinoya not so much. I don’t know why but their food doesn’t taste as fresh as it looks in pictures. 

  • http://twitter.com/etoile Meredith

    I lived in Japan for three months as a vegetarian, it is insanely hard. I am expecting to move back next year, and I am preparing to eat meat in the 3 months before I leave, so I can eat it when I’m there.  I’ve been a vegetarian for 18 years in the U.S., but it’s a different culture over there, and it’s just too hard.

    That said, Freshness Burger had great vegetarian options, and Saizeriya (another fast food place not mentioned here) had a good plate of vegetarian pasta.

  • Alex

    Isn’t Lotteria from Korea? I’m pretty sure it’s owned by Lotte, the Korean food and drink company.

  • JP

    I miss Sukiya.. spent eating almost all of my weekend lunches there, for a year, coz the place I’m staying don’t serve food on weekends.

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    From what I can tell, Lotte is a Korean/Japanese company. At least, that’s what the Wikipedia article says.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lotte_%28conglomerate%29

  • Fauline Simanjuntak

    OK, we have MOS burger, yoshinoya, lotteria, pepper lunch, even beard papa’s in Jakarta. But somebody need to bring that pizza-la here!

  • Anonymous

    Now I want to eat Gyudon. Thanks.

  • Joyfie

    Haha! Brilliant.. A little bit of our silly comedy made it into Japan.. I saw a Japanese advert for Peep show a while back.. Can’t wait to watch the dub!