What the Colonel and JAL Taught Me about Japan

November 29, 2012 / 1 Comment


Food by Air KFC. Photo courtesy Japan Airlines

You got to love how a little thing like an airline’s in-flight meal promotion can open a window to another culture. Back in 1974, when Colonel Sanders first brought his fried chicken to Japan, residents might have thought Kentuckians wore white suits, white beards and black bolo ties, while standing over the fry pot cooking chicken. 

Okay, so it was a narrow peek into the culture of the American south, in a time before Facebook and Youtube. But even in today’s seemingly limitless information age, it was still surprising to learn from a Japan Airlines news release, that yesterday’s Southern culinary icon is part of present-day Japanese tradition.


Lines to get into the KFC in Japan. Photo courtesy Danny Choo at http://www.dannychoo.com


Service on the JAL Dreamliner

From December to February, economy and premium economy class customers on JAL flights between Narita and destinations in the United States and Europe will be served special KFC fried chicken snacks in a “special box and tray mat”. 

Folks these days are so health conscious, I had to ask JAL spokeswoman Sze Hunn, “What’s up with that?”  

“KFC is closely associated with the Christmas season,” Sze answered in an email. A little research shows she’s right.  A long ago marketing campaign by the company took advantage of expats looking for turkey for the holidays in a country where those critters don’t roam, and the next thing you know the Japanese have developed a taste for, well let’s just call it chicken tempura.


On my recent trip to Narita, I ate fried avocado. That was novel. And delicious.

Over the years KFC’s Christmas/chicken connection in Japan has evolved so that it now includes a Santa-suited Col. Sanders holding a bucket full of candy canes, a special plastic holiday plate and hours long queues of people eager to bring Southern-style poultry home to celebrate the birth of Christ in whatever way Buddhists and Shintoists do.  

On the JAL flights, passengers will be served two pieces of the Colonel’s original fried chicken, flat bread and coleslaw and provided with this adorably written advice for how to best enjoy the snack: 

Savor the chicken as is, or as “a sandwich by sandwiching the fresh lettuce leaves and fragrant fillet in the bread and topping it off with special mayonnaise.”

Special mayonnaise? Fragrant fillet? Put that way and it does sound appetizing.  


The best aviation-themed meal I ever had was just a few months ago, while visiting Narita’s  Museum of Aeronautical Science. I ate at the window-lined cafe overlooking the runway of Narita International Airport. Everyday curry with rice is never more delicious than when consumed off a jumbo-jet shaped plate as the real thing roars on by overhead. 

For more on this subject read Danny Choo’s blog post why Xmas = KFC in Japan


Categories: Flying Lessons, Uncategorized


One response to “What the Colonel and JAL Taught Me about Japan”

  1. Anonymous says:

    Query: Does this person write for a livinig?

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