Hiroshima is one of Japan’s most distinctive food cities — a place where bold flavors, fresh Seto Inland Sea seafood, and deeply local traditions come together in ways you won’t find anywhere else. The city is famous worldwide for its layered okonomiyaki, but venture beyond that iconic dish and you’ll discover an entire food culture built on oysters, sea eel, naval curry, and one of Japan’s most celebrated citrus fruits. This guide covers 20 must-try foods in Hiroshima, with prices, where to find them, and the insider tips that make the difference between a good meal and an unforgettable one.
Jump to section- Okonomiyaki & Noodles
- Oysters Three Ways
- Seafood & Hot Pot
- Ramen & Curry
- Local Specialties
- Sweets & Drinks
- Where to Eat
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- Practical Tips
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¥Under ¥1,000Street food, small bites
¥¥¥1,000–¥3,000Most restaurants
¥¥¥¥3,000–¥8,000Oyster kaiseki, premium beef
¥¥¥¥Over ¥8,000High-end dining
The undisputed king of Hiroshima food, and fundamentally different from the Osaka version most people know. Where Osaka mixes everything into the batter, Hiroshima layers — a thin crepe base, a mountain of shredded cabbage, pork belly, yakisoba noodles, a fried egg, and a drizzle of dark sweet sauce. The result is taller, chewier, and far more complex than it looks. Watching a skilled teppan chef build each one with two spatulas is half the experience.
📍 Where to go: Okonomimura in downtown Hiroshima — a three-story building entirely dedicated to okonomiyaki, with over 20 stalls. Each has its own style and loyal regulars. Reserve a seat at the counter to watch the chef work.
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Hiroshima Tsukemen 広島つけ麺
¥800–¥1,200¥¥
Cold thick noodles served alongside a deeply spiced dipping broth — Hiroshima’s own take on tsukemen is famous across Japan for its punishing heat level. The broth is built on a base of ground sesame, chicken stock, and dried fish, then spiked with chili oil to a degree you choose: mild (辛さ1) up to extreme (辛さ10+). Topped with soft-boiled egg, chashu, and bean sprouts, then dipped and slurped through the cold noodles. Best on a hot summer day.
📍 Where to go: Hotto Motto and Makoto-ya are local chains with spice-level menus, but the original Hiroshima tsukemen is credited to Hiroshima Tsukemen Ryushanhai in Naka Ward.
Hiroshima produces over 60% of Japan’s oysters, and eating them raw at the source is one of the great food experiences the country has to offer. Hiroshima Bay’s calm, mineral-rich waters produce oysters with a plump, creamy body and a clean ocean sweetness that is noticeably different from oysters farmed elsewhere. Served chilled on a half shell with a squeeze of Hiroshima lemon and a dab of ponzu, they need nothing more.
📅 Season: Peak season is October to March, when the flesh is at its fattest. In summer, oysters are available but smaller and leaner.
A seasonal classic that appears on menus across Japan in winter, but nowhere is kakifurai better than in Hiroshima. A thick coating of panko breadcrumbs is fried to a shattering golden crust that gives way to a steaming, briny oyster interior. Served with a wedge of lemon and Worcestershire-based sauce, a set of five or six large Hiroshima oysters makes a deeply satisfying lunch. The contrast in texture — crackling outside, molten inside — is what kakifurai is all about.
📍 Where to go: Any oyster restaurant in Hiroshima city centre or along the Miyajima ferry terminal will serve excellent kakifurai sets at lunch.
On Miyajima island, vendors grill oysters directly on the shell over open charcoal or on iron plates beside the approach to the famous torii gate. The heat intensifies the oyster’s sweetness and concentrates the juices inside the shell. A squeeze of lemon is all that’s needed. Eating a freshly grilled shell of Hiroshima oyster while looking across the sea at the floating torii is one of the defining travel moments in all of Japan.
📍 Where to go: Omotesando shopping street on Miyajima island — multiple vendors grill oysters on the spot for ¥200–¥350 per shell. The smoke and sizzle are hard to resist.
Sea eel (anago) rice is Hiroshima’s most elegant dish — and a Miyajima specialty that has been served the same way since 1901. A whole grilled conger eel is laid over a lacquer box of steamed rice, brushed with a sweet soy tare that caramelises on the grill into a deep, sticky glaze. Unlike unagi (freshwater eel), anago has a lighter, cleaner flavour with a more delicate texture that lets the tare speak louder. It is the original Miyajima souvenir meal, and the recipe has barely changed in over a century.
📍 Where to go: Ueno restaurant near Miyajima ferry terminal has a 120-year history. Arrive early — they sell out by early afternoon on busy days.
Hiroshima produces more lemons than any other prefecture in Japan, and the lemon hot pot is a modern local dish that puts this citrus front and centre. A clean chicken or dashi broth is brightened with fresh lemon slices — the sourness and fragrance transform a standard nabe into something lighter and more aromatic. Oysters, sea bream, and scallops from the Seto Inland Sea are natural pairings, and the acidity of the broth cuts through the richness of the seafood beautifully. A uniquely Hiroshima dish that has gained fans across Japan.
📍 Season: Best in winter (October–March) when Hiroshima lemons are freshest and nabe season is in full swing. Many izakayas in the city offer it as a winter special.
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Kaki-meshi (Oyster Rice) 牡蠣めし
¥1,200–¥2,500¥¥
Plump oysters are simmered in a seasoned broth of dashi, soy sauce, and mirin, then cooked together with Japanese short-grain rice until the grains absorb every bit of briny, umami-rich liquid. The result is a deeply flavoured, ocean-perfumed rice dish that is both humble and extraordinary. Kaki-meshi is sold as an ekiben (train station bento) on the San’yo Line and is one of Japan’s most celebrated station lunches — a practical souvenir you eat on the train.
📍 Where to buy: The Hiroshima Kaki-meshi bento is available at Hiroshima Station’s ekiben corner. Best eaten warm, so time your purchase to the train departure.
From the port town of Onomichi, this ramen style is instantly recognisable by one thing: small white discs of back fat floating on the surface of a dark soy sauce broth. The broth is light and clean in body but intense in flavour — built on chicken, pork bones, and dried sardines — and the flat, straight noodles soak it up efficiently. The rendered back fat dissolves on the tongue with each sip, adding a rounded richness without making the soup heavy. A cold-weather bowl that has earned fans far beyond Hiroshima Prefecture.
📍 Where to go: Best eaten in Onomichi itself — the waterfront is lined with ramen shops. Shukaen and Tsuta no Ha are long-standing favourites among locals.
The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force base in Kure has a long tradition of serving curry on Fridays — a custom that dates back to the Imperial Navy as a way to help sailors remember which day of the week it was at sea. Each JMSDF ship developed its own recipe, and the best have been made available to the public through restaurants in Kure city. The thick, mahogany-coloured curry is richer and more deeply spiced than standard Japanese curry, served over rice with pickled daikon. Eating it is a piece of living naval history.
📍 Where to go: The Yamato Museum in Kure serves curry inspired by the recipe used on the legendary battleship Yamato. Multiple restaurants near the museum serve different ship-specific versions.
Japan’s beloved meat-and-potato stew has a disputed origin, but Kure in Hiroshima is one of the two cities that claims to have invented it. According to local legend, a naval commander who had tasted British beef stew asked his cook to recreate it using Japanese ingredients — the result was nikujaga, a sweet-savoury soy-mirin broth with thinly sliced beef, potatoes, onion, and konnyaku. It is simple, warming, and one of the most comforting dishes in all of Japanese cooking. In Kure, the beef version is traditional; elsewhere in Japan, pork is common.
📍 Where to go: Many set-lunch restaurants in Kure serve nikujaga as part of a teishoku (set meal) for under ¥1,000. It’s the city’s proudest home-cooking export.
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Hiroshima Beef (Hiroshima-gyu) 広島牛
¥3,000–¥8,000¥¥¥–¥¥¥¥
Less internationally known than Kobe or Matsusaka beef, Hiroshima-gyu is the prefecture’s own brand of wagyu raised on the Chugoku mountain terrain. The cool highland climate and clean water produce cattle with fine, evenly distributed marbling and a mild, clean fat that melts at a lower temperature. Hiroshima beef is typically enjoyed as teppanyaki (iron-plate steak) or sukiyaki, and several high-end restaurants in the city specialize in showcasing it alongside seasonal Seto Inland Sea seafood.
📍 Where to go: Teppanyaki restaurants in Hiroshima city’s Naka and Minami wards offer Hiroshima-gyu steak courses that pair well with local sake from Saijo.
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Hiroshima Lemon Dishes 広島レモン料理
¥800–¥2,500¥¥
Hiroshima Prefecture grows over 60% of Japan’s domestic lemons — primarily on islands in the Seto Inland Sea where the mild maritime climate is ideal for citrus. Unlike imported lemons, Hiroshima lemons are grown with minimal chemicals and the skin is considered safe to eat, which is why locals use them differently: the whole fruit is sliced into dishes, pressed into dressings, and used as a salt substitute. Lemon soy sauce over oysters, lemon ramen, lemon tarts — in Hiroshima, lemon is an ingredient, not just a garnish.
📍 Where to buy: The Hiroshima Lemon Road near the Peace Memorial Park has several shops dedicated to lemon products — preserved lemons, lemon cake, lemon beer, and fresh whole lemons for souvenirs.
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Hassaku (Hiroshima Citrus) はっさく
¥300–¥600¥
Hassaku is a large bittersweet citrus that was first discovered in Hiroshima in the mid-19th century and is still grown almost exclusively in the Seto Inland Sea islands. It looks like a grapefruit but tastes different — the sourness is more refined, the bitterness quieter, and there is a faint sweetness underneath that grapefruit lacks. Eaten fresh in season (January to March), hassaku is also processed into daifuku, jelly, and preserves that are sold as local souvenirs. The fresh fruit from a roadside vendor on Innoshima island is a very different experience from the packaged version.
📍 Season: Harvest is January to March. Roadside stands on Innoshima (the heartland of hassaku production) sell direct from the orchard at some of Japan’s freshest prices.
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Mihara Octopus (Mihara no Tako) 三原のタコ
¥800–¥2,000¥¥
The shallow waters around Mihara city in eastern Hiroshima Prefecture are famous for octopus (tako) with an unusually firm, meaty texture and sweet flavour — a result of the fast tidal currents that force the octopus to move constantly, developing dense muscle. Mihara tako is served as sashimi (raw, thinly sliced), boiled and sliced over rice, or as a feature in kaisen bowls. Locals eat it as naturally as people in Osaka eat takoyaki, and the octopus festival in spring draws visitors from across Chugoku.
📍 Where to go: Mihara port area restaurants serve fresh local tako year-round. The octopus sashimi at fish market restaurants near Mihara Station is a standout.
The definitive souvenir of Hiroshima and one of the most famous wagashi in all of Japan. Momiji manju is a maple leaf-shaped cake — named for the red maple leaves that colour Miyajima in autumn — with a soft, slightly chewy dough wrapping a filling of sweet red bean paste. Modern variations now include custard, matcha, chocolate, and even cheese fillings, but the original red bean version remains the standard against which all others are measured. Freshly made ones from shops beside the Miyajima rope car are noticeably better than pre-packaged versions.
📍 Where to buy: Yamadaya on Miyajima has been making momiji manju since 1894. Watch them being stamped out on the traditional iron mold through the shop window before you buy.
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Hassaku Daifuku はっさく大福
¥250–¥400 each¥
A beautiful piece of seasonal confectionery unique to Hiroshima. A whole segment of hassaku citrus is wrapped in smooth white bean paste (shiro-an) and then enclosed in soft mochi — creating three concentric layers of texture and a filling that bursts with bright, bittersweet citrus when you bite through. The hassaku segment provides a jolt of tartness that prevents the daifuku from being cloying. Available January to March when hassaku is in season, and only at select Hiroshima confectionery shops.
📍 Where to buy: Innoshima Hassaku Daifuku from Kyo-ya confectionery is the most famous version — mail-order sells out weeks in advance every season. In-store purchases require an early start.
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Hiroshima Lemon Cake レモンケーキ
¥150–¥300 each¥
A retro local sweet that has made a major comeback in recent years as a beloved old-school souvenir. Lemon cake is a lemon-shaped sponge cake coated in white fondant glaze with a faint citrus tang — a product from Hiroshima’s mid-20th-century baking culture when Western-style cakes were a novelty. Dozens of local bakeries now sell their own versions, and the competition over whose recipe is most faithful to the original has spawned a genuine food culture. Simple, sweet, and charming in its nostalgia.
📍 Where to buy: Lemon Cake House, Remon-Do, and many souvenir shops near Hiroshima Station sell multiple local bakery versions. Buy a selection and compare — the flavour differences are genuinely interesting.
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Saijo Sake 西条酒
¥600–¥2,000 / glass or bottle¥–¥¥¥
Saijo, a 30-minute train ride east of Hiroshima city, is one of Japan’s three great sake-brewing towns — alongside Nada in Kobe and Fushimi in Kyoto. Its soft, mineral-rich underground water produces sake with an exceptionally smooth, round character and an elegant sweetness that pairs naturally with the mild seafood of the Seto Inland Sea. Eight major breweries line Saijo’s famous Sakagura-dori (brewery street), many open for tours and tastings. Bring a reusable cup and sample your way down the street during the annual October Sake Festival.
📍 Getting there: Saijo Station is on the San’yo Shinkansen line. The brewery street is a 5-minute walk from the station exit. The Saijo Sake Festival in October is Japan’s largest sake event with 200+ breweries.
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Hiroshima Craft Beer & Lemon Sour 広島クラフトビール・レモンサワー
¥600–¥1,200¥¥
Hiroshima has a growing craft beer scene anchored by several local breweries, and the lemon sour cocktail — a mix of shochu, soda, and fresh-squeezed Hiroshima lemon — has become the city’s signature izakaya drink. The local lemon sour uses whole Hiroshima lemons with the skin left on, giving it a fragrance and depth that commercial lemon flavouring cannot match. On a warm evening at a counter-style izakaya near Hondori shopping arcade, an ice-cold lemon sour with a plate of grilled oysters is the most Hiroshima meal imaginable.
📍 Where to go: Hondori and Nagarekawa districts in central Hiroshima have the highest concentration of izakayas serving fresh lemon sours. Hiroshima Craft Beer Restaurant near the Atomic Bomb Dome serves local brews alongside regional food.
TOC
Where to Eat in Hiroshima — By Area
🏙️ Hiroshima City Centre
- Okonomimura for okonomiyaki
- Hondori arcade izakayas
- Nagarekawa evening dining
- Oyster bars near Peace Park
- Hiroshima Station food floor
⛩️ Miyajima Island
- Grilled oyster street stalls
- Anago meshi at Ueno
- Momiji manju bakeries
- Seafood restaurants on Omotesando
⚓ Kure City
- Yamato Museum curry
- Naval curry restaurants
- Nikujaga set-lunch spots
- Kure fish market
🌊 Onomichi
- Onomichi ramen on the waterfront
- Shukaen and Tsuta no Ha ramen
- Cat Alley cafe snacks
- Seto Inland Sea ferry seafood
🍶 Saijo
- Sakagura-dori brewery tastings
- Sake and local cuisine sets
- October Sake Festival
🍋 Inland Sea Islands
- Innoshima hassaku orchards
- Mihara octopus restaurants
- Lemon farm visits on Ikuchijima
Hiroshima Food Budget Guide
| Hiroshima Okonomiyaki | ¥900–¥1,500 | Okonomimura, citywide | Lunch sets slightly cheaper |
| Hiroshima Tsukemen | ¥800–¥1,200 | Ramen shops citywide | Choose your spice level carefully |
| Raw Oysters (per piece) | ¥300–¥600 | Oyster bars, Miyajima | Season: Oct–Mar for best quality |
| Kakifurai (set) | ¥1,000–¥2,000 | Restaurants citywide | 5–6 large oysters per set |
| Grilled Oyster (shell) | ¥200–¥350 | Miyajima street stalls | Cash only, eat immediately |
| Anago Meshi | ¥1,500–¥3,000 | Miyajima restaurants | Sell out by early afternoon |
| Onomichi Ramen | ¥700–¥1,200 | Onomichi waterfront | Add back fat topping (+¥100) |
| Kure Naval Curry | ¥900–¥1,500 | Kure, Yamato Museum | Sold at lunch only at some spots |
| Momiji Manju | ¥120–¥200 each | Miyajima, Hiroshima Stn | Buy fresh over pre-packaged |
| Saijo Sake (tasting) | ¥300–¥800 / glass | Saijo Sakagura-dori | Festival entry free in October |
Practical Tips for Eating in Hiroshima
🦪 Oyster season The best oysters are October to March. Summer oysters exist but are smaller. If you’re visiting specifically for kaki, plan for the cooler months.
🥞 Okonomiyaki order At Okonomimura, you sit at the counter and the chef builds it in front of you. Don’t rush — a well-made Hiroshima okonomiyaki takes 15–20 minutes to cook properly.
⛩️ Miyajima timing Anago meshi at Ueno and grilled oyster stalls sell out by early afternoon on busy days. Arrive by 11am for the best selection, especially on weekends.
🍜 Tsukemen spice Hiroshima tsukemen heat levels are serious. Start at level 3–4 if you have no tolerance for spice. Level 7+ is genuinely painful for most people.
⚓ Getting to Kure Kure is 35 minutes from Hiroshima Station by JR Kure Line. The Yamato Museum curry and nikujaga lunch sets are best combined into a half-day trip.
🍋 Lemon shopping Buy whole Hiroshima lemons from the central market or Lemon Road near Peace Park. The skin is edible and intended to be used — it adds something no imported lemon can.
🚌 Day trip planning Hiroshima city, Miyajima, Onomichi, and Kure each deserve half a day. A two-night stay is the minimum to eat meaningfully across the four main food zones.
Exploring more of the Chugoku region?
Check the full Chugoku Food Guide for Okayama, Yamaguchi, Tottori, and beyond.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Hiroshima most famous for eating?
Hiroshima is most famous for three foods: Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki (layered savory pancake with noodles), Hiroshima oysters (Japan’s largest producing prefecture), and anago meshi (conger eel rice from Miyajima). These three define the city’s food identity worldwide.
How is Hiroshima okonomiyaki different from Osaka okonomiyaki?
The key difference is the method. Osaka-style mixes all ingredients (cabbage, batter, meat) together before cooking — like a pancake batter. Hiroshima-style builds the pancake in layers: a thin crepe base, a mountain of raw cabbage, pork, then yakisoba noodles, then a fried egg on top. The result is much taller, chewier, and more complex than the Osaka version.
When is the best time to eat Hiroshima oysters?
October to March is peak oyster season, when the flesh is at its fattest and creamiest. Summer oysters are available but noticeably smaller and less flavourful. For the definitive Hiroshima oyster experience — raw, fried, or grilled — plan your visit between November and February.
What food should I eat on Miyajima island?
The three must-eat foods on Miyajima are anago meshi (conger eel rice — the island’s signature dish), grilled oysters on the shell from street stalls along Omotesando, and fresh momiji manju (maple-leaf shaped cakes) from the traditional shops. If you can only do one, make it the grilled oysters — eating a fresh shell beside the torii gate is one of Japan’s great food experiences.
What is Kure Naval Curry and why is it famous?
Kure is home to the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force base, and the navy has a tradition of serving curry every Friday since the Meiji era. Each ship had its own recipe, and the best have been made public through restaurants in Kure. The curry is richer and more intensely spiced than typical Japanese curry — an important piece of living naval history that you can eat for lunch.
Is Hiroshima worth visiting just for food?
Yes. Hiroshima has one of the most distinct and coherent food cultures in Japan — oysters, okonomiyaki, anago, lemon, sake, and naval curry all rooted in the region’s specific geography and history. For a food-focused traveller, two to three days gives enough time to eat across Hiroshima city, Miyajima, Kure, and Onomichi without feeling rushed.
What are good food souvenirs from Hiroshima?
The best Hiroshima food souvenirs are: momiji manju (maple leaf cakes) in various fillings from Miyajima bakeries; lemon cake from local old-school bakeries; Saijo sake from the brewery street; Hiroshima lemon products (preserved lemons, lemon jam, lemon shochu); and packaged kaki-meshi (oyster rice) bento from Hiroshima Station if you’re continuing by train.
Where is the best place to eat Hiroshima okonomiyaki?
Okonomimura in central Hiroshima — a three-story building with over 20 individual okonomiyaki stalls — is the most famous destination. Each stall has its own recipe and style. Alternatively, the teppan shops lining the arcade streets south of Hondori offer a more local, less tourist-focused experience. Sit at the counter and watch the chef work — that’s the proper way to eat it.

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