
He’s known for his outspoken and often controversial opinions, from saying that civil servants who have tattoos should resign, to denying the forcible recruitment of South Korean “comfort women” during the second world war.
But it was an intense debate about whether students should be allowed to have furikake seasoning with their school lunch that left city mayor Tōru Hashimoto scratching his head this week as he asked the Osaka Board of Education: “What’s wrong with furikake?!”
Cold, unappetising and tasteless is how junior high students in Osaka describe their school lunches. And kids have been voting with their chopsticks, leaving lunches uneaten. With 70 percent of students failing to finish their school lunch, the city Board of Education has been discussing ways to get them to clear their plates.
“More students might eat their rice if they could have furikake [with school lunch]”, teachers suggested in a meeting on Tuesday. Mayor Hashimoto then asked in amazement, “Furikake wa dame nan desu ka?”, which translates as “Huh? What’s wrong with furikake?” or “Why can’t they have furikake?”
Furikake is a flaked flavouring that is sprinkled on rice. It comes in all kinds of flavours, but it’s typically fishy with seaweed, and is a popular and effective way to get Japanese kids to eat up their bowl of plain rice.
▼ Furikake: Looks weird, tastes great.
So what’s the problem with furikake? Well, typically, school lunches in Japan are rice-heavy and well-balanced. But furikake is high in salt, and allowing kids to use it might undo the careful balance of the healthy meal they’re being served. On the other hand, some say that the negative effects of higher salt intake might be offset by the benefit of students actually finishing their meals.
School meal uptake in Japan is impressively high, and students are expected to eat the whole thing with no leftovers. But in Osaka, where bringing lunch from home has long been the norm, school lunches are a recent development. In 2011, only 11 percent of junior high students in Osaka were having a “full school lunch” including milk, compared to a national average of 76 percent. Amid concern that some homemade lunches were not healthy enough, school lunches were rolled out across the city.
▼ Iced buns, while delicious, do not a healthy lunch make.
But to keep costs down, lunches in Osaka are prepared elsewhere, refrigerated, and delivered to schools. The problem is, lots of kids don’t like chilled lunch.
▼ And who can blame them? Meat and potato stew, straight from the fridge.
On the furikake question specifically, the debate lasted 10 minutes and did not come to any concrete conclusions; the board decided to consult with experts before taking any further action. Will flaked seasonings be allowed in Osaka’s schools? Hashimoto was insistent that schools must be allowed to decide for themselves without interference from the city government: “If we can’t even let schools decide about furikake…”
Sources: Sankei Shimbun/Yahoo, Naver Matome
Featured image: awatajinja




Furikake rice seasoning sales are soaring, which is bad news for Japan as a whole
School Lunch in Japan 【You, Me, And A Tanuki】
Top 10 Japanese school lunch food items that adults miss the most
Itadakimasu! A brief history of the evolution of Japanese school lunches
Mayor of Osaka wants to legally control when kids can and can’t use smartphones in their own home
When will the cherry blossoms reach full bloom in Japan this year?[Forecast]
Japanese onsen egg maker from 100-yen store Daiso needs to be on your shopping list
Cherry blossoms begin blooming in Japan with record-early starts for sakura season
Universal Studios’ Sailor Moon theme park attraction is finally coming to America
Studio Ghibli director Hayao Miyazaki releases new artworks, still wants to make movies
Japanese man drives truck that’s on fire directly to fire station, drops flaming potatoes[Videos]
Paired Sailor Moon bracelets are femininely eye-catching and represent all 10 Sailor Senshi
We tried a Japanese egg steamer to achieve the perfect breakfast eggs without a stove
Umamusume food and drinks dash into real world at Family Mart convenience stores[Taste test]
Train station platform ramen store closes its doors on half a century of history in Tokyo
Studio Ghibli releases Catbus pullback keychain that runs like the anime character
Studio Ghibli adds new Mother’s Day gift sets to its anime collection in Japan
Starbucks Japan releases new My Fruit³ Frappuccino at only 34 stores around the country
Virtual idol Hatsune Miku redesigned with look that adds new elements and brings back old ones
The next time you’re feeling stressed out, you could relax on a Pokémon Psyduck chair from Japan
Komachi Shokudo: Japanese mum’s-style cooking for breakfast, lunch and dinner in Tokyo
The top 10 graduation songs in Japan as chosen by current Japanese high school students
Starbucks Japan unveils new sakura cherry blossom collection for hanami season 2026
The 10 most annoying things foreign tourists do on Japanese trains, according to locals
Nine great places to see spring flowers in Japan, as chosen by travelers (with almost no sakura)
Starbucks Japan releases new sakura goods and drinkware for cherry blossom season 2026
Starbucks Japan releases first-ever Hinamatsuri Girls’ Day Frappuccino
Japan’s cherry blossom season predicted to start earlier than we’d thought, especially in Tokyo
Survey asks foreign tourists what bothered them in Japan, more than half gave same answer
Japan’s human washing machines will go on sale to general public, demos to be held in Tokyo
Starbucks Japan releases new drinkware and goods for Valentine’s Day
We deeply regret going into this tunnel on our walk in the mountains of Japan
Studio Ghibli releases Kodama forest spirits from Princess Mononoke to light up your home
Japan’s newest Shinkansen has no seats…or passengers [Video]
Major Japanese hotel chain says reservations via overseas booking sites may not be valid
Put sesame oil in your coffee? Japanese maker says it’s the best way to start your day【Taste test】
No more using real katana for tourism activities, Japan’s National Police Agency says
“How I learned to stop worrying and eat Japanese school lunches,” by P.K. Sanjun
Our Japanese reporter’s encounter with American school lunch
Osaka’s new remote-learning policy leaves teachers strained and forces students to go to school
Japanese school lunch noodles fried so hard that children and teachers chip teeth, go to hospital
Human pyramids continue in Kobe schools as injuries mount to 51, mayor’s pleas to stop unanswered
No school lunches? Tokyo boxed lunch stand says kids have to pay, but doesn’t care when, to whom
Tokyo government building serves local school lunch to public in Japanese cafeteria
Foreign student’s comment leads to Japan’s favorite tonkotsu ramen being added to school lunch menu
Japanese survey takers go back to school to vote on their favorite school lunch menu items
Japanese town axes milk from school lunches, debate likely to wage until cows come home