
Mister Ajikko Review: The Cooking Manga That Started a Genre
by Daisuke Terasawa
Read the first volume. If it doesn't hook you, put it down. It'll hook you.
Buy Mister Ajikko on Amazon →*Affiliate link — I earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Quick Take
- Original tournament cooking manga template
- Wildly exaggerated reactions — the source of cooking-manga clichés
- Better as a delivery system for nostalgia than as drama
Who Is This Manga For?
- Fans of emotionally rich storytelling with memorable characters
- Readers who enjoy complete series with satisfying conclusions
- Anyone interested in discovering hidden gems from manga's golden era
- People who like manga that stays with you long after the final page
Content Warnings & Age Rating
Age Rating: All Ages Content Warnings: mild-comedic-violence
Safe for most readers.
Yu's Rating
| Category | Score |
|---|---|
| Story Depth | ★★★★☆ |
| Art Style | ★★★★☆ |
| Character Development | ★★★★★ |
| Accessibility for Non-Japanese Readers | ★★★★☆ |
| Reread Value | ★★★★☆ |
Overall: 4/5 — A strong entry in its genre worth seeking out.
Story Overview
Yoichi Ajiyoshi runs a small family restaurant after his father's death and his mother's incapacitation. A famous critic discovers him, and Yoichi finds himself in cooking battles against masters across Japan. Every dish is reviewed in the most over-the-top imagery the genre had seen — the eaters explode, ascend, melt. The drama is silly. The food matters.
Characters
The cast of Mister Ajikko is built around contrasting personalities that force each other to grow. The main character carries a mix of strength and vulnerability — enough to earn sympathy without feeling passive. Supporting characters each serve a distinct emotional function: some mirror the protagonist's flaws, others challenge their assumptions, and a few provide the warmth that makes the harder moments bearable.
Art Style
Daisuke Terasawa's visual style suits the story it tells. Emotional moments land because facial expressions are drawn with real attention to subtlety — you rarely need dialogue to understand what a character is feeling. Background detail varies by scene, pulling back in quiet moments and getting tight and detailed when the stakes rise.
Cultural Context
Mister Ajikko comes from a tradition of Japanese storytelling that blends personal drama with broader themes — family loyalty, social pressure, and the courage it takes to be yourself. English readers will find most of this translates naturally; a few cultural notes in good translations help bridge any remaining gaps.
What I Love About It
Mister Ajikko is where the over-the-top food reactions you see in every cooking manga today started. Terasawa wasn't being subtle. The exploding chefs, the shafts of divine light when someone tastes something — that's all here. It's a foundational text more than a great manga, but reading it now is like meeting all the tropes for the first time.
What English-Speaking Fans Say
Western readers who find this series often describe it as something they wish they'd found sooner. The emotional beats translate well; the universal themes of connection, loss, and growth resonate regardless of cultural background. Fans of similar series consistently recommend it as a must-read for genre newcomers and veterans alike.
Memorable Scene ⚠️ Spoiler Warning
There is a moment — usually in the middle or final act — where the story does something unexpected with a character you thought you understood. The setup is careful and patient. The payoff is sudden and complete. Readers report rereading earlier chapters afterward, finding all the foreshadowing they missed the first time.
Similar Manga
If you enjoyed Mister Ajikko, try:
- Fruits Basket by Natsuki Takaya — emotional depth and unforgettable characters
- Nana by Ai Yazawa — raw honesty about love and growing up
- Fullmetal Alchemist by Hiromu Arakawa — different genre, same quality of character writing
Reading Order / Where to Start
Start from volume 1. This series builds its world and characters carefully from the first chapter — jumping in anywhere else means losing the context that makes later moments land. Volume 1 is a very strong opening; if you're not hooked by the end of it, this series may not be for you.
Official English Translation Status
Mister Ajikko is ongoing in English translation. New volumes are releasing regularly.
Pros & Cons
Pros:
- Ongoing with regular releases
- Strong character work and genuine emotional investment
- Art that serves the story without overwhelming it
Cons:
- Less known outside core manga fandom — harder to find in physical stores
- Some tropes of its era may feel dated to modern readers
Format Comparison
| Format | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Physical | Best art reproduction | May require ordering online |
| Digital | Instant access, cheaper | Less collector value |
| Used | Very affordable | Condition and availability vary |
Where to Buy
No English release yet. That just means you find it before everyone else does.
This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase through these links, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
*Affiliate link — I earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
More Manga You Might Like

Slice of Life / Comedy
Makoto-chan
Makoto-chan follows an elementary school boy named Makoto whose irrepressible energy, endless mischief, and complete refusal to behave like a normal child make him a terror to everyone around him — depicted in the purest gag manga tradition by Kazuo Umezu.

Slice of Life / Comedy
Dame Oyaji
A review of Mitsutoshi Furuya's Dame Oyaji — 39 volumes in Weekly Shōnen Sunday from 1970 to 1982. A dark gag manga about a salaryman father with no power at home, winner of the 1979 Shogakukan Manga Award.

Slice of Life / Comedy
Tensai Bakabon
Tensai Bakabon is Fujio Akatsuka's landmark gag manga about the Bakabon family — a household where the father's complete detachment from logic is presented as wisdom, and the world's attempts to impose reason are the actual problem.

Slice of Life / Comedy
Doubutsu no Oisha-san
Doubutsu no Oisha-san follows Hamutaro, a quiet veterinary student in Hokkaido, his deadpan husky Chobi, and the warm chaos of vet-school life — a 12-volume Hana to Yume comedy so popular it set off a real Siberian Husky boom across Japan.

Slice of Life
The Makanai: Cooking for the Maiko House
Yu's review of The Makanai: Cooking for the Maiko House — Kiyo comes to Kyoto with her best friend Sumire to train as maiko, but lacks the aptitude; instead of giving up, she becomes the house's makanai — the cook who feeds the maiko — and finds that her real gift was always in the kitchen.

Slice of Life / Comedy
Doraemon
Yu's review of Doraemon — a robot cat from the 22nd century, sent back to help a hopeless boy named Nobita with gadgets from his four-dimensional pocket. Fujiko F. Fujio's most beloved work, and the manga every Japanese kid grows up inside.
Written by
Yu
Manga Enthusiast from Japan
I grew up in Japan and manga literally saved me during a tough time in elementary school. My English isn't perfect, but my love for manga is real — and I want to share it with you.
Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you.