Curry passed into Japan along with other Western foods when Japan opened its ports to international trade. Merchants from countries friendly with Japan began settling in Yokohama, and curry spread through their employees and visiting Japanese people.
At the same time as calls for Westernization, curry soon landed in Japan and spread like wildfire.
In the era of the refined Taisho democracy in which the economy thrived, the vigorous civil vitality gave birth to a succession of innovative ideas, and we can see that a great many businesses set their sights on curry.
The greatest occurrence is the invention of solidified curry roux. The simple and convenient curry roux reached a period of high growth as it infiltrated dining tables around the country. Also becoming served as school lunch, curry is developing into a national food of Japan.
Japanese-made curry spread throughout the world and even into space. Curry, a Japanese national food, is developing a new era that binds the people of the world together.