Oishinbo
| Oishinbo | |
102nd tankōbon volume cover, featuring Shirō Yamaoka (top right), Yūzan Kaibara (top left), and Yūko Kurita (center bottom)  | |
| 美味しんぼ | |
|---|---|
| Genre | |
| Manga | |
| Written by | Tetsu Kariya | 
| Illustrated by | Akira Hanasaki | 
| Published by | Shogakukan | 
| English publisher | |
| Magazine | Big Comic Spirits | 
| Demographic | Seinen | 
| Original run | October 1983 – May 12, 2014 (indefinite hiatus) | 
| Volumes | 111 | 
| Anime television series | |
| Directed by | Yoshio Takeuchi | 
| Produced by | Hidehiko Takei (NTV) Yoshio Katō (Shin-Ei Animation)  | 
| Written by | Ryūzō Nakanishi Yasuo Tanami Haruya Yamazaki  | 
| Music by | Kazuo Otani | 
| Studio | Shin-Ei Animation | 
| Original network | NNS (NTV) | 
| Original run | October 17, 1988 – March 17, 1992 | 
| Episodes | 136 | 
| Anime television film | |
| Oishinbo: Kyūkyoku Tai Shikō, Chōju Ryōri Taiketsu!! | |
| Directed by | Iku Suzuki | 
| Written by | Haruya Yamazaki | 
| Music by | Kazuo Otani | 
| Studio | Studio Deen | 
| Original network | NNS (NTV) | 
| Released | December 11, 1992 | 
| Runtime | 90 minutes | 
| Anime television film | |
| Oishinbo: Nichibei Kome Sensō | |
| Directed by | Iku Suzuki | 
| Written by | Haruya Yamazaki | 
| Music by | Kazuo Otani | 
| Studio | Studio Deen | 
| Original network | Nippon TV | 
| Released | December 3, 1993 | 
| Runtime | 89 minutes | 
| Live-action film | |
| Directed by | Azuma Morisaki | 
| Produced by | Shigehiro Nakagawa Renji Tazawa Junichirō Hisaita Katsuhiko Takemasa Osamu Kamei Hisaomi Saitō  | 
| Written by | Toshiharu Maruuchi Masao Kajiura  | 
| Music by | Takayuki Inoue | 
| Studio | Shochiku | 
| Released | April 13, 1996 | 
| Runtime | 105 minutes | 
Oishinbo (Japanese: 美味しんぼ; lit. "The Gourmet") is a long-running Japanese cooking manga series written by Tetsu Kariya and drawn by Akira Hanasaki. The manga's title is a portmanteau of the Japanese word for "delicious", oishii (美味しい), and the word for someone who loves to eat, kuishinbō (食いしん坊). The series depicts the adventures of culinary journalist Shirō Yamaoka and his partner (and later wife), Yūko Kurita. It was published by Shogakukan between 1983 and 2008 in Big Comic Spirits, and resumed again on February 23, 2009, only to be put on an indefinite hiatus after the May 12, 2014, edition in the weekly Big Comic Spirits, following harsh criticism of Oishinbo's treatment of the Fukushima Daiichi disaster.
Before this suspension, Oishinbo was collected in 111 tankōbon volumes, making it the 18th longest manga released and among the best-selling manga series in history. The series was a perennial best-seller, selling 1.2 million copies per volume, for a total of more than 135 million copies sold.
The series received the 1986 Shogakukan Manga Award for seinen/general manga. It was adapted as a 136-episode anime television series broadcast on Nippon Television from October 17, 1988, to March 17, 1992, followed by two sequel TV anime film specials in 1992 and 1993.
It was adapted into a live-action film directed by Azuma Morisaki, starring Kōichi Satō and Rentarō Mikuni, which premiered on April 13, 1996. The manga is licensed in English in North America by Viz Media.
In March 2016, writer Tetsu Kariya announced on his blog that he wanted to end the manga after it returned from hiatus. He wrote that "30 years is too long for many things" and that he believed "it's about time to end it."