Buddhism was introduced to Japan during the
Asuka period. At that time, killing animals was against Buddhist law. Also eating beef was prohibited since cattle were considered work animals. However, people could eat meat under some special circumstances, such as when they were sick, or at special events, like
bōnenkai, the year-end drinking party. During the Edo period, eating game, such as boar and duck, was common and not forbidden. In the 1860s, when Japan opened its ports to foreign merchants, foreigners who came to Japan introduced the culture of eating meat and new cooking styles. Cows, milk, meat, and eggs became widely used, and sukiyaki was a popular way to serve them. At first, cattle were imported from neighboring countries like Korea and China as the demand for beef increased. Sukiyaki possibly originated and became popular in the Kansai region. Following the
1923 Great Kantō earthquake, many beef restaurants in Tokyo were closed and many people in Kantō temporarily moved to the Osaka area. While the people of Kantō were in Osaka, they got accustomed to the Kansai style of sukiyaki, and when they returned to Kantō, they introduced the Kansai sukiyaki style, where it has since become popular. Beef is the primary ingredient in today's sukiyaki. In 1959, food writer for the
New York Times Craig Claiborne wrote that the dish was among the four most requested recipes the newspaper had received over the previous year. In 1978 W.L. Taitte stated in
Texas Monthly that sukiyaki was "the most famous but hardly the most characteristic Japanese dish." By the 1980s, in the U.S., sukiyaki was becoming obscure as sushi became more prominent. ==Trivia==