🟣 Tokyo-Do-Must — Only-in-Tokyo experience.
This article introduces Imahan’s Kuroge Wagyu Sukiyaki Bento and Yoshinoya’s gyudon, both available at Haneda Airport. Although they are both beef dishes, each reflects a different chapter of Tokyo’s history. Discover two of Tokyo’s most iconic beef traditions.
Introduction
When eating at Haneda Airport, many travelers look for sushi or ramen.
But if you want to understand Tokyo’s food culture, beef is also worth your attention.
At Haneda Airport, you can find Sukiyaki Bento from Imahan and Gyudon from Yoshinoya.
This article introduces these two beef dishes you can enjoy at Haneda Airport.
What to Try
Imahan Kuroge Wagyu Sukiyaki Bento
Sukiyaki has roots in the beef hot pot culture that spread in Tokyo during the Meiji era, when eating beef became a symbol of modernization.
Imahan is one of the famous names connected with this tradition.
The Kuroge Wagyu Sukiyaki Bento at Haneda Airport includes thinly cooked wagyu beef, tofu, shirataki noodles, mushrooms, and egg. It is a compact way to enjoy Tokyo’s classic beef cuisine before boarding a flight.
It feels calm, refined, and slightly special — a small taste of Tokyo’s “hare” food culture, or food for special occasions.
Yoshinoya Gyudon
Yoshinoya was founded in 1899 at the Nihonbashi fish market in Tokyo.
Its beef bowl developed as a quick and filling meal for market workers. Later, as Tokyo’s fish market moved from Nihonbashi to Tsukiji and then to Toyosu, Yoshinoya continued to be closely connected with Tokyo’s market culture.
Gyudon is simple: beef and onions simmered in a sweet-savory sauce over rice.
At Haneda Airport, try it with raw egg, red pickled ginger, and shichimi chili pepper. This is one of the most familiar ways to enjoy Yoshinoya in Japan.
It is not luxury beef. It is everyday Tokyo beef culture — fast, warm, and deeply familiar.
Tokyo or Trip?
🟣 Tokyo-Do-Must — Only-in-Tokyo experience.
You can eat both sukiyaki and gyudon across Japan.
However, these two dishes have a special connection with Tokyo. Sukiyaki grew from the beef hot pot culture of modern Tokyo, while Yoshinoya’s gyudon was born from the city’s fish market culture.
At Haneda Airport, you can experience both sides of Tokyo’s beef story: beef as a special meal, and beef as an everyday meal for working people.
If you have time before your flight, try one of them. If you are especially curious about Tokyo food culture, try both.
Explore Nearby
- A Local’s Guide to Kamata Gyoza: Tokyo’s Local Dumpling Town Near Haneda 🥟
- A Local’s Guide to Oimachi Dining: Unpolished Everyday Meals in Tokyo 🍛
- A Local's Guide to Oimachi Ramen: Authentic & Deep Bowls 🍜
- Fuji Soba in Oimachi: Everyday Station Soba in Tokyo 🍜
- A Local's Guide to Oimachi Yokocho: Tokyo's Hidden Showa-Era Bar-Hopping 🍺
Similar Dishes
- Tsukiji Breakfast — Odayasu Chashu-Egg Teishoku 🍳
- Toyama Black at Taiki — The Origin Where Rice and Raw Egg Complete the Bowl 🍜
- A Local's Guide to Kagoshima: Kurobuta, Wagyu & More 🐖
External Links
About "Taste of Japan"
Hello, I'm Yuta.
Born in landlocked Yamanashi and having lived in the gourmet city of Sendai for 10 years, I now call Togoshi-Ginza home. My frequent business trips across Japan allow me to constantly explore the diversity of regional flavors.
The Concept: "Tokyo or Trip?"
Visiting every region of Japan in a single trip is nearly impossible. Some food experiences are worth the travel to the source, while others offer a fully satisfying experience right here in Tokyo.
This blog is a guide to help you make that choice. Based in Togoshi-Ginza, I share my honest experiences and "my personal answer" to help you maximize your culinary journey in Japan.
- 🟠 Local-First: Best experienced in its home region. Worth a trip.
- 🟢 Great-in-Tokyo: A nationwide favorite or regional specialty that offers a fully satisfying, authentic experience right here in Tokyo.
- 🟣 Tokyo-Do-Must: A unique food culture born in or exclusive to Tokyo.