Quantifying culinary diversity across countries.

Compare countries

French vs Japanese food & cuisine

Compare
Flag
Flag
France

VS

Japan

France

Japan

The average French daily plate size is

The average Japanese daily plate size is

2387 g.
1510 g.
Icon

Grains

Icon

Fish and seafood

Icon

Produce

Icon

Eggs and dairy

Icon

meats

Icon

Sugar, fats and nuts

French cuisine has a reputation for being very complex, and this is partially true for professional haute cuisine, which demands technique and skills. Everyday French cooking is relatively simple, rooted in fresh ingredients; dishes are rustic one-pot meals with minimal processing, yet, even though simple, it is still a fare for eaters. Despite the simplicity, the cook must understand how flavors are built and combined.

Read more
Icon

Grains 365 G

WHEAT

296 G

RICE

27 G

CORN

33 G

BARLEY

2 G

RYE

1 G

OATS

3 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

3 G

Icon

Grains 367 G

WHEAT

121 G

RICE

204 G

CORN

37 G

BARLEY

2 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

1 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

2 G

France has a huge bread, pastry, and baking culture, with daily baguettes, croissants, and artisanal patisseries. French bakers and pâtissiers undergo severe training to perfect the precision required for creating delicate layers, textures, and flavors. The emphasis on top-tier butter, fine flour, and fresh cream ensures that the final products are both exquisite quality and refined.

Read more
Icon

Produce 761 G

PULSES

4 G

VEGETABLES

297 G

STARCHY ROOTS

164 G

FRUITS

296 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

Icon

Produce 491 G

PULSES

3 G

VEGETABLES

299 G

STARCHY ROOTS

75 G

FRUITS

87 G

SEA PLANTS

2 G

VEGETABLES are rarely the main focus of a dish in classic cuisine, but they do play supporting roles in building flavors, creating sauces, and providing accompaniments (with some exceptions, of course, in the case of ratatouille, tian, or potage). France is known for its extensive use of leeks, thin green beans, endives, carrots, turnips, and potatoes. Veggies are never overcooked.

Read more
Icon

Meats 245 G

POULTRY

69 G

PORK

89 G

BEEF

62 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

7 G

OTHER MEAT

3 G

OFFALS

15 G

Icon

Meats 154 G

POULTRY

62 G

PORK

60 G

BEEF

26 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

0 G

OTHER MEAT

0 G

OFFALS

6 G

While meat is often the center of main dishes, portions are smaller than in many other Western countries. A typical French meat serving might be 130g (source), served with accompanying vegetables and sauces.

Read more
Icon

Fish and seafood 93 G

FISH

66 G

SEAFOOD

27 G

Icon

Fish and seafood 125 G

FISH

84 G

SEAFOOD

41 G

Classical French cuisine has developed specific techniques for fish preparation – they define cooking times, match specific sauces for different types of fish, and fillet fish in certain ways that have set international standards. We could exemplify this French approach by looking at sole meunière: a very fresh Dover sole is filleted, lightly dressed in flour, cooked shortly in butter till golden brown, and served with a simple sauce of browned butter, fresh lemon juice, fresh parsley, and capers.

Read more
Icon

Eggs and dairy 744 G

EGGS

38 G

MILK AND DAIRY

658 G

ANIMAL FATS

48 G

Icon

Eggs and dairy 215 G

EGGS

55 G

MILK AND DAIRY

158 G

ANIMAL FATS

2 G

The role of dairy and milk products is quite nuanced. Each region has its own climates and terroirs that affect dairy, and specific cattle breeds in regions produce unique milk, which results in a very varied assortment of milk products.

Read more
Icon

SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 179 G

NUTS

18 G

SWEETENERS

98 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

42 G

OILCROPS

21 G

Icon

SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 158 G

NUTS

8 G

SWEETENERS

77 G

SUGAR CROPS

0 G

VEG OILS

44 G

OILCROPS

29 G

French desserts stand out from other cultures in several ways. French pastry making is extremely precise in techniques and measurements. It is treated almost like a science—exact temperatures, specific ratios, and timing are crucial.

Read more
Icon

Herbs

BAY LEAVES

CHERVIL

MARJORAM

PARSLEY

ROSEMARY

SAGE

SUMMER SAVORY

TARRAGON

THYME

CHIVES

ANGELICA

JAPANESE PARSLEY

MUGWORT

PERILLA/SHISO

SESAME LEAVES

France
Common
Japan

BAY LEAVES

CHERVIL

MARJORAM

PARSLEY

ROSEMARY

SAGE

SUMMER SAVORY

TARRAGON

THYME

CHIVES

ANGELICA

JAPANESE PARSLEY

MUGWORT

PERILLA/SHISO

SESAME LEAVES

Icon

Spices

BLACK PEPPER

CLOVES

JUNIPER BERRIES

NUTMEG

SAFFRON

VANILLA

WHITE PEPPER

DRY CHILI

SANSHO

France
Common
Japan

BLACK PEPPER

CLOVES

JUNIPER BERRIES

NUTMEG

SAFFRON

VANILLA

WHITE PEPPER

DRY CHILI

SANSHO

Icon

Aromatics

CARROT

CELERY ROOT

CELERY STALKS

FENNEL

GARLIC

LEEK

LEMON

ONION

ORANGE

SHALLOT

TRUFFLES

CHINESE CHIVES

DRIED MUSHROOMS

GINGER

JAPANESE LONG ONION

SPRING ONION

YUZU

France
Common
Japan

CARROT

CELERY ROOT

CELERY STALKS

FENNEL

GARLIC

LEEK

LEMON

ONION

ORANGE

SHALLOT

TRUFFLES

CHINESE CHIVES

DRIED MUSHROOMS

GINGER

JAPANESE LONG ONION

SPRING ONION

YUZU

Icon

Condiments

BRANDY

BUTTER

CREAM

CRÈME FRAÎCHE 

DUCK FAT

OLIVE OIL

WINE

WINE VINEGAR

MAYONNAISE

MUSTARD

DASHI

DRIED FISH/SEAFOOD

DRIED SEAWEED

FERMENTED BEAN PASTE

FERMENTED FISH/SEAFOOD

FISH SAUCE

KOKUTŌ

MIRIN

RICE VINEGAR

SAKE

SESAME OIL

SESAME SEEDS

SHIO KOJI

SOY SAUCE

WASABI

France
Common
Japan

BRANDY

BUTTER

CREAM

CRÈME FRAÎCHE 

DUCK FAT

OLIVE OIL

WINE

WINE VINEGAR

MAYONNAISE

MUSTARD

DASHI

DRIED FISH/SEAFOOD

DRIED SEAWEED

FERMENTED BEAN PASTE

FERMENTED FISH/SEAFOOD

FISH SAUCE

KOKUTŌ

MIRIN

RICE VINEGAR

SAKE

SESAME OIL

SESAME SEEDS

SHIO KOJI

SOY SAUCE

WASABI

France

SEASONINGS

The French approach to seasoning is nuanced, but the main principle is restraint with purpose. Unlike cuisines that might layer multiple strong spices, French cooks take a more conservative way, focusing on timing. This doesn’t mean French food is bland – instead, it reflects a belief that proper seasoning should bring out the best in ingredients. Salt is crucial, but its application is methodical. French chefs typically season throughout the cooking process rather than just at the end, allowing flavors to develop and meld naturally.

One of the most distinctive aspects of French seasoning is its reliance on stocks and reductions—flavors are built through the careful reduction of liquids, creating natural flavorings derived from ingredients. Mirepoix (diced onions, carrots, and celery) forms the fundamental block for many dishes. The other aromatic bases are matignon (mirepoix with ham or bacon) and duxelles (minced mushrooms with onions and herbs).

French seasons with herbs extensively. Fresh herbs are almost always preferred over dried ones. Two combinations mark the base and the finish of dishes:

THE BOUQUET GARNI – an aromatic base of thyme, parsley, and bay leaf used in stocks, soups, and braises.

FINES HERBES – an aromatic finish of parsley, chives, tarragon, and chervil used in egg dishes, light sauces, and salads.

Compared to many other cuisines, a relatively conservative dried spice selection is used—mainly nutmeg, black and white pepper, cloves, cinnamon, saffron, and allspice.

Different regions of France have developed their own characteristic condiments and aromatic combinations: Provence favors garlic-based condiments and olive-based preparation, Burgundy is known for its wine-based condiments and marinades, Brittany features seaweed-based condiments, Alsace shows Germanic influences preferring mustards and pickles.

The French tradition doesn’t employ pre-mixed spice blends like some other cuisines do, but there are several important combinations:

QUATRE ÉPICES or FOUR SPICES – white pepper, nutmeg, cloves, ground ginger or cinnamon – used in charcuterie, pates, stews

HERBES DE PROVENCE – thyme, basil, rosemary, savory, oregano, marjoram, sometimes lavender – used for grilled meats and roasted vegetables.

PERSILLADE – a mixture of parsley and garlic used to finish dishes

SAUCES

French sauces are considered one of the highest expressions of culinary art. The five foundational hot sauces from which many others are derived from mother sauces:

BÉCHAMEL – milk-based white sauce thickened with roux.

VELOUTÉ – light stock-based sauce (chicken, veal, fish) thickened with roux.

ESPAGNOLE – brown stock-based sauce thickened with roux.

HOLLANDAISE – a warm emulsion of egg yolks and melted butter.

TOMATE – tomato-based sauce.

A roux is a classic thickening agent made by blending butter and flour and then cooking the mixture to remove the raw flour taste. Roux forms the base of many sauces, soups, and stews, its color and flavor vary depending on how long it’s cooked:
– briefly for a white roux used in white sauces like béchamel;
– longer for a golden roux, used for velouté sauces;
– darker brown shade and nutty flavor, used in darker sauces like espagnole.

Secondary sauces are derived from mother sauces by adding additional ingredients:

From béchamel come MORNAY with cheese and SOUBISE with onion purée.
From velouté derive ALLEMANDE with eggs and cream and SUPRÊME with cream.
From espagnole emerge DEMI-GLACE and BORDELAISE with red wine.
From hollandaise spring BÉARNAISE with tarragon and shallots and MOUSSELINE with whipped cream.

Some other cold emulsified sauces are:

MAYONNAISE – cold emulsion of egg yolks and oil.
VINAIGRETTE – emulsion of oil and vinegar.
RÉMOULADE – mayonnaise-based sauce with herbs and capers.
AIOLI – garlic mayonnaise popular in southern France.

At the core of every sauce specific methods, timing, and temperature control are required to achieve the desired result.

Japan

SEASONINGS AND SAUCES

The concept of umami, often called the fifth taste, is central to Japanese cooking. This depth comes from ingredients like kombu seaweed, bonito flakes, miso, and aged soy sauce, dashi. The pursuit of umami represents the Japanese mastery of extracting maximum flavor from minimal ingredients, creating layers of taste that satisfy. Rather than creating complex spice blends or heavily seasoned dishes, Japanese cooking emphasizes subtle enhancement and natural flavors. This delicacy is enhanced by the frequent use of pickled condiments, such as pickled ginger or radish.

Traditional cuisine uses relatively few dried spices – mainly togarashi (chili pepper blends), sansho pepper, and sesame seeds. Even when spices are used, they’re applied sparingly. When Japanese cuisine does use aromatics, it favors fresh ones like ginger, wasabi, shiso, and scallions over dried ones.

Japanese cuisine relies more heavily on liquid seasonings, fermented pastes, and condiments than on dried herbs and spices, which sets it apart from many other culinary traditions.

SOY SAUCE – is a fundamental liquid seasoning that provides umami depth to countless dishes. Japanese soy sauce is generally refined and light in color.

MISO – beyond soup, this fermented paste serves as a base for glazes, marinades, and dressings, adding complex fermented flavors.

DASHI – while not exactly a condiment, this foundational broth (made from kombu seaweed and bonito flakes) forms the umami backbone of Japanese cooking.

WASABI – fresh grated wasabi provides clean, sharp heat that complements sushi and sashimi

MIRIN – sweet and subtle wine, made of glutinous rice. It adds depth and roundness to dishes, sweetening without a flat taste.

Back to Top