A 52-episode anime television series adaptation by Nippon Animation aired on Fuji TV from April 1997 to September 1998. In some other countries, the anime adaptation was also called Cooking Master Boy. A second 24-episode anime television series adaptation of Shin Chka Ichiban!, or True Cooking Master Boy, produced by NAS and Production I.G, aired for two seasons from October to December 2019 and January to March 2021, respectively.

The story takes place in 19th-century China during the Qing dynasty, where the Emperor was weakened, and the country was close to chaos. It is also during a fictitious era called "The Era of the Cooking Wars". It was an era in which top chefs with different cooking styles tried their best to improve their skills and to become the best chef in China. It is a country where insulting a high-grade chef or fooling around with cooking could land a person in a jail, and impersonating a top-chef is as bad as usurpation of authority. Chefs compete with each other in order to gain respect and even power, but also with the risks of losing everything.


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After the death of Mao's mother, Pai, who was called the "Goddess of Cuisine", Mao becomes a Super Chef in order to take the title as Master Chef of his mother's restaurant. However, before he takes his mother's place as Master Chef, he continues to travel China in order to learn more of the many ways of cooking, in the hopes of becoming a legendary chef, just like his mother. During his journey, he meets great friends and fierce rivals who wish to challenge him in the field of cooking.

In 2019, it was announced that Shin Chka Ichiban!, or True Cooking Master Boy manga would receive an anime television series adaptation produced by NAS, with animation by Production I.G. It is directed and written by Itsuro Kawasaki, with characters designs by Saki Hasegawa and music composed by Jun Ichikawa.[26] The series aired from October 12 to December 28, 2019, on MBS's Animeism programming block.[4]

Liu Mao Xing2019 anime1997 animeAliasesYoungest Super Chef in HistoryBiographical InformationPlace of BirthSzechuanStatusAliveRelativesPai (mother)

Karin (older sister)AffiliationYang Spring RestaurantKikkaro RestaurantPhysical DescriptionAge14 (currently)13 (when he took Super Chef exam)GenderMaleHair ColorBlack (2019 anime)

Blue (1997 anime)Media PortrayalVoice ActorNatsumi Fujiwara (2019 anime)Mayumi Tanaka (1997 anime)Liu Mao Xing is the main character of Chka Ichiban!. He is the youngest super chef in history at thirteen years old, and has a sense of taste and imagination extraordinary compared to ordinary people.

Meticulous in preparing dishes, he often reveals unconventional foods that surprise those eating them. He is very proud of his cooking as he was taught by his mother Pai. He was very defensive when a chef from the Yang Spring Restaurant insulted his mother's cooking. This was in response to Mao's failed dish. However he is humble and reflected on why Chouyu and his chefs refused to eat his vegetables, being able to create the dish sucessfully the next day. Mao is very kind such as taking the blame to prevent Shiro getting into trouble, to sharing gifts with Mei Li when he noticed she looked sad.

Preparing dishes in the kitchen at Guangzhou, Mao takes the blame for a dish Shirou made which was chastised by a customer. Offering to make it up to him, Mao prepares three eggs which satisfies Shell, and is challenged to a cooking match by him.

His cooking skills are complimented by Shell and he agrees to another contest when they meet again. Noticing Mei Li looking down, he later brings her souvenirs and prepares peach shaped dim sum to surprise her the day before her birthday.

Mao respects his mother as a chef and he can't bear the thought that her mother cooking would lost forever had anyone else took over Kikkaro Restaurant. In the past, he also helped tasting Pai's attempts in creating new recipes.

Approached by him in the restaurant he is working in, Mao prepares him three types of eggs before being challenged to a cooking contest by him. He was awed by Shell's capabilities when it came to cooking and tells him he had never had such an enjoyable cooking contest.

Contrary to popular belief, stories about cooking in Japan did not begin with Iron Chef. Manga like Hochonin Ajihei, Tekka no Makihei, and Oishinbo made readers' palates water with delight through the 1970s and 1980s, priming an entire generation for showman Kaga Takeshi's overblown (but appetizing) phenomenon in the 1990s.So it's no surprise that Ogawa Etsushi's semi-historical cooking manga series about a boy's travails in China would be animated, capitalizing on the success of television chefs such as Chen Kenichi, as well as the trend of popular anime using China as a locale (Fushigi Yugi).What we get in the end is a strange blend between the theatrical presentation of Iron Chef (with Chinese courtiers oohing and aahing over plates of sumptuous-looking food) and the "I'm gonna be the best" cliche of a sports series like Captain Tsubasa, with "battles" every so often punctuating the progress of the main "hero" (the young chef Mao) on his journey.Visually, it's surprisingly a very colorful show. Everyone wears bright, beautiful outfits (like you've come to expect from anything set in China), and has bright hair colors, and the character designs are very strikingly shounen, with sharp lines for the grown men, and big eyes for the teenage Mao, who looks oddly enough rather like a refugee from the Lunar video game series stuck in Fushigi Yugi clothes - the effect is actually sorta cute.The characters themselves are a bit of a mixed bag early on. Mao is a pretty stock-seeming shounen "hero" archetype, a little prone to getting in trouble, but earnest, studious, and, most importantly, very highly competent. The first "opponent", Shou An, is way too obvious and transparent as a villain, and most of the characters just seem a little too generic to stand out, though this has immense potential to improve later in the series (there's two seasons worth), and certainly Mao's character design change in the second season would point in this direction. Interestingly, I have screened this in both Cantonese and Japanese, and strangely, the show felt right in Cantonese, even though the voice acting itself wasn't necessarily better in that language. Animation-wise, it's not impressive, relying mainly on the strength of the art design to pull it through. No flashy action sequences here, this is about cooking. Lots of dramatic stills and, yes, pans to draw things out. But while I'm speaking of the art design ... the food! Oh, the food. Don't watch this hungry, or you will find yourself quickly seeking out your nearest purveyor of Szechuan cuisine. Really. Fried rice never looked so good.Personally, I like the concept of this show a lot, but as for the actual execution, I find myself having to table my optimism for future installments of the series. It's a little slow for most viewers, and the premise isn't going to appeal to a lot of Westerners, who would be more interested in eating Chinese cooking than watching an anime about it. While not quite as dramatic as Iron Chef, and not nearly as immediately appealing as Ranma 1/2 and Fushigi Yugi, Cooking Master Boy is very watchable and rather interesting. Still, I don't see it appealing to any but a select few.

Cooking Papa is one the pioneers of cooking anime having debuted in 1992. The story features a model businessman who secretly loves to cook at home for his family. is easy and fun to watch for all ages. This is the longest series on this list, having a whopping total of 151 episodes! Cooking Papa is best watched here and there when you need a nice food anime to satisfy your cravings.

This is a Chinese anime that takes place in 19th century China during the Qing Dynasty, during a fictitious era called "The Era of the Cooking Wars". A young boy competes with all the best chefs to become the best chef in China. Sound familiar? It should if you have watched Food Wars. The show debuted in 1997 and has a total of 52 episodes. If you liked Food Wars then you should love Cooking Master Boy!

Gourmet Girl Graffiti is a simple Japanese slice of life anime that follows a middle schooler trying to learn how to cook. Her food always comes out horrible, but then her cousin moves in which leads to vast improvement. It's a simple show great for the whole family to watch. The anime debuted in 2015 and has a total of 12 episodes, great for binge watching on a weekend.

Bartender features a lone bar operated by a prodigy bartender who is said to mix the most incredible cocktails anyone has ever tasted. Admittedly a little slow to start, this anime puts an interesting twist on bartending and cocktails. Bartender debuted back in 2006 and has a total of 11 episodes. Being the shortest anime on this list, you can't go wrong giving it a try.

Dagashi is the Japanese word for candy, therefore Dagashi Kashi is the ultimate anime for Japanese candy and snack aficionados. Its a slice of life anime featuring a kid who is forced to run his family Dagashi, or candy shop. Many snacks featured in our TokyoTreat boxes appear in this show. This is the newest anime on the list having debuted in 2016 with a total of 24 episodes currently. Dagashi Kashi was a huge hit in Japan when the anime originally aired, and is personally my favorite anime on this list. Feel free to brag to your friends about your Japanese candy knowledge after watching this show.

This depends on what you mean by "demographic". In general, the demographic is "anime watchers who like to cook or watch content related to cooking." There are dozens of YouTube channels that are exclusively videos of people cooking, or cooking competitions, and have millions upon millions of viewers. Shows like Iron Chef, Kitchen Nightmares, The Great British Baking show are incredibly popular. There is, of course, going to be a large subset of people who like those channels and shows and are also anime fans. Cooking is an almost universally shared experience; most people have done it. Japan, especially, has a very deep culinary culture with more Michelin starred restaurants than any other country. e24fc04721

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