Kinou Nani Tabeta?
What Did You Eat Yesterday?
Edit
What would you like to edit?
 

Kinou Nani Tabeta?

Alternative Titles

Japanese: きのう何食べた?
English: What Did You Eat Yesterday?
More titles

Information

Type: Manga
Volumes: Unknown
Chapters: Unknown
Status: Publishing
Published: Feb 22, 2007 to ?
Genres: Award Winning Award Winning, Gourmet Gourmet, Slice of Life Slice of Life
Demographic: Seinen Seinen
Serialization: Morning
Authors: Yoshinaga, Fumi (Story & Art)

Statistics

Score: 7.481 (scored by 818818 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #32052
2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #4371
Members: 4,657
Favorites: 62

Available At


Resources

Recommendations

Neither BL nor Bara, these are slice of life manga about gay characters running in seinen magazines. Catering to a straight male readership unaware of LGBT issues, they're realistic and don't contain any graphic scenes. 
reportRecommended by acajou
Up to learning some delicious new recipes? The main course for both of these stories is the depiction of cooking with the side dish of relationships and everyday happenings told in a lighthearted and comfortable way. 
reportRecommended by Trivialmadness
Despite being on opposite ends of the realism spectrum, both manga share a powerful ambition to maximize their respective genres in ways that few mangaka would ever dare to try (one by building up an extremely large cast and committing to having all of them present in the story continuously, and the other by following its characters' lives in real time for 15+ years and counting), and have handled the challenges they set for themselves exceptionally well. 
reportRecommended by Druser
Both are cooking manga that focus on frugal, everyday meals. No cooking tournaments or over-the-top reactions to be found here, just warm interpersonal relationships set to the theme of food. 
reportRecommended by Denji
Both are about bringing people together with cooking- Shinya Shokudou is more humble cooking in a diner and Kinous Nani Tabeta is more gourmet home cooking. 
reportRecommended by tzippurah
Both are realistic manga about cooking for your family or lover. 
reportRecommended by tzippurah
Fumi Yoshinaga has found an interesting niche for which to write manga: boy's love for foodies. Both titles feature gay characters without focusing excessively on romance and shun yaoi cliches; and both have plots centering around food, complete with detailed and delicious descriptions. 
reportRecommended by Anomalous