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1[[quoteright:350:[[WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/simpsons_sushi.jpg]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Not done with [[WireFu wires]].]]
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4The Asian continent is home to many culinary traditions, each distinct and unique. Many of these cuisines are noted for their extreme care and delicacy in balancing flavors and meticulous presentation; for example, a Japanese sushi chef will spend ''years'' learning to cook rice properly before they're allowed to touch a knife to a fish. From [[FoodPorn Korea's infinite varieties of kimchi, to Vietnam's pho noodle soup, to Thailand's love of fiery chilies, to India's mastery of spices, to China's wealth of regional cuisines]], the flavors of the Orient are highly prized by eaters the world over.
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6In Western media, however? Asian food often means exactly one thing: theatrically swinging around knives, regardless of the environment, circumstances, or even the food being prepared. Whether it's a sushi feast or a humble plate of beef and broccoli, a fictional character cooking Asian food will often pick up a knife or cleaver and start cutting in all manner of exaggerated, theatrical, ''extremely dangerous'' ways, as though they're fighting a martial-arts battle instead of making dinner. Yet despite all of this, the cook isn't just swinging a blade around at random, their actual cuts can be ''inhumanly'' precise. When this happens, the character has caught a serious case of ''Asian Cleaver Fever''.
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8While it does crop up in the ActionGenre from time to time -- especially when combined with the ChefOfIron trope -- Asian Cleaver Fever is primarily a ComedyTrope. It's more commonly a SightGag, or a setup for a joke involving AmusingInjuries, than a serious plot point in itself. Thus, examples should be limited to instances where cooking in such a way would be absurd or at least unexpected, or where such behavior ends in AmusingInjuries, a fight, or some similar consequence.
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10Naturally, the idea that all -- or even ''most'' -- Asians cook with hazardously exaggerated knife work is nonsense. Asian cookery is no more theatrical or martial than any other type. Nevertheless, there is a ''tiny'' amount of TruthInTelevision to this trope, in the sense that a particular style of restaurants serving Asian food -- typically referred to as "''hibachi'' grill" (or, more precisely, ''teppanyaki'') restaurants -- really ''do'' incorporate knife acrobatics and general theatrics into the process of cooking and serving patrons. The most widely known example is the Benihana chain of restaurants. Given that Benihana started out when the popularity of Asian cuisine was still in its infancy in America, it's likely at least one source of inspiration for this trope.
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12Another possible inspiration may come from the cutlery used in Asian cookery, namely the ''caidao'', or Chinese vegetable cleaver. It's a rather large and intimidating blade that certainly ''looks'' like a weapon, and swinging it around makes for a striking visual. However, despite its visual similarities to a Western meat cleaver, it's a fairly thin blade designed for everyday slicing and chopping, not heavy tasks like hacking meat or bone.
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14It's worth mentioning that this trope often plays into NationalStereotypes -- while the cook wildly flinging around knives need not be Asian to fit this trope, they very often are. Depending on how the trope is played, this can result in either a harmless, good-natured joke or a gag that's insulting or even kind of racist. However, this trope isn't strictly a Western one: it ''does'' appear in Asian media from time to time, often to drive home a character's skill with bladed weapons, or skill in the kitchen.
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16Almost always involves at least one AbsurdlySharpBlade. Can overlap with the ChefOfIron trope, especially the variety that uses cooking implements in their style of combat. May involve MartialArtsAndCrafts, if the chef uses his knife skills for combat purposes or considers his cooking to be a martial art. Not to be confused with [[RaceFetish Asian Cleavage Fever]]. Compare MartialArtsForMundanePurposes.
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18----
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20!!Examples
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22[[AC:Anime & Manga]]
23* ''Manga/TheDisappearanceOfNagatoYukiChan'': In the very first episode, Ryoko Asakura manages to cut a bunch of veggies in midair with extreme precision, which [[MythologyGag makes Kyon nervous]], though he can't say [[Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya why]] that [[Anime/TheDisappearanceOfHaruhiSuzumiya is.]]
24* ''Manga/FairyTail'': during a filler arc, Fried uses his swordsmanship to turn some flying fish into delicious-looking sushi... unfortunately, it does nothing to improve its abysmal taste.
25* ''Manga/MagiTheLabyrinthOfMagic'': Sharrkan's battle against a rampaging giant monster eel takes this bend to show his ImplausibleFencingPowers, as in a few wide swings he decapitates the monsters, removes the fins, bones, scales, and inner organs and cuts the flesh in such way it falls into a beautiful sashimi composition.
26* In ''Manga/{{Toriko}}'', sometimes chefs cooking this way (by swinging knives at incredibly fast speed) demonstrate their skill, preparing intricated food with great skill. Subverted during the Blue Grill Arc by Yuda, when he's seemingly wasting time by swinging his giant kitchen knife back and forth... only to reveal that he was actually "cooking" the surrounding air bubble to alter the gravity and avoid falling from a giant seesaw into a brazier of flames (ItMakesSenseInContext ).
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28[[AC:ComicStrips]]
29* In ''ComicStrip/PearlsBeforeSwine'', Pig goes to a Japanese restaurant to see a chef swing his knives around. Pig loses an ear. The second time, [[BlackComedy he loses his other ear]].
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31[[AC:Film -- Animated]]
32* ''WesternAnimation/Madagascar1'': When Alex gets hungry, Rico the penguin prepares him a plate of sushi by putting on a headband, taking a knife in each flipper, slashing at the fish (which remains whole), tossing it up into the air, and having it land as perfect pieces of sushi, rice and all.
33* ''WesternAnimation/SharkTale'' has [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4JoOhnVchtI a gag]] that may count as a downplayed example -- it features the martial arms headband and a knife, but latter is only used to stab the counter.
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35[[AC:{{Film}} -- Live-Action]]
36* In ''Film/AlexanderAndTheTerribleHorribleNoGoodVeryBadDay'', Anthony, his family, and his girlfriend Celia go to a hibachi restaurant called Nagamaki's before prom. The chef rapidly flings sushi rolls at Ben, whose sleeve catches fire on a decoration as he moves around trying to catch them in his mouth.
37* Justified in ''Film/EverythingEverywhereAllAtOnce''. Our Chinese-American heroine Evelyn does have a scene where she does a lot of fancy knife work while cooking, but it's explicitly an AlternateSelf who happens to be a hibachi chef at a restaurant where flashy tricks are a selling point.
38* In ''Film/PoliceAcademy 2'', Capt. Pete Lassard visits a Benihana-style restaurant to meet with this brother, Commandant Eric Lassard, where the cook does all kinds of knife theatrics... [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FhDr_ANQ34M much to Pete's chagrin]]. At the get-go, Pete pulls a gun on the cook when he plunges his knife into the wooden table as part of his act, and he later angrily asks the cook if all the theatrics are necessary. Alas, neither noticed that the goldfish Eric brought as a gift [[BlackComedyAnimalCruelty was left on the hibachi surface]].
39-->'''Capt. Pete Lassard:''' ''(is hit in the head by a flying piece of shrimp)'' ...You stupid ''BASTARD!''
40* ''Film/SonOfTheMask'': At the end where Tim's new cartoon show has a baby giving his father a little Asian man chopping some sushi for him.
41* In the ''Film/{{Stormbreaker}}'' film, there's a bit with an American woman making sushi, where she dresses up in a martial arts costume, swings knives around in a ridiculously dramatic way, and starts speaking Japanese.
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43[[AC:Live-Action TV]]
44* The opening skit in the ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000'' episode ''[[Recap/MysteryScienceTheater3000S08E14RidingWithDeath Riding With Death]]'' shows Mike having a {{flashback}} to his days as a teppanyaki chef. He cuts Crow's hand off whilst swinging knives around.
45-->'''Servo:''' Mike's dangerous enough just wielding that big, clunky ''body'' of his!
46* ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'': Exaggerated and parodied in the "Samurai Delicatessen" sketches, which feature Creator/JohnBelushi as a {{samurai}} running the counter of a New York deli. Sketches feature the samurai angrily chopping up meat for sandwiches using his katana. One infamous gaffe was when Belushi accidentally hit veteran host Creator/BuckHenry in the forehead, causing Henry to wear a bandage for the rest of the episode.
47* In one episode of the mid-80s comedy-adventure series ''Series/SonnySpoon'', Sonny is undercover as a cook at a Benihana-style Asian restaurant, doing the usual theatrical knife-flinging shtick. In so doing, he loses control of one of his knives and accidentally pins a guy's cigarette to the wall. He [[IMeantToDoThat covers]] it by saying, "[[JapaneseRanguage Prease]], no smoking."
48* ''Series/{{Soap}}'': Jodie seems to be fond of taking his girlfriends to hibachi grills. He takes Carol, where she tells him that she's pregnant. He's nonplussed at best because he's gay (they did sleep together, but it was a one-night stand). The chef is so distracted by their conversation he accidentally stabs himself in the leg.
49* ''Series/ThirdRockFromTheSun'': For their first date Dick and Mary go to a Benihana-style restaurant where the chef performs tricks using food thrown to him by the diners. Mary gets carried away and throws a pepper mill at him, knocking him out cold. Dick takes over and actually turns out to be pretty skillful with the knife, even throwing in a joke where he pretends to cut his finger off.
50* ''Series/TheMuppetsMayhem'': In the third episode Animal discovers that his [[AllDrummersAreAnimals wild drumming style]] translates extremely well to working as a tepanyaki chef. The owner of the restaurant declares him TheChosenOne for how quickly he takes to it.
51* ''Yan Can Cook'' has chef Martin Yan chopping veggies rapid fire, likely playing up to this trope, for a OnceAnEpisode signature move.
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53[[AC:Video Games]]
54* In ''VideoGame/BreathOfFire2'' you visit a restaurant where [[spoiler:they try to cook and serve you]]. This trope is in full effect -- albeit mostly by implication due to LimitedAnimation -- as each strike of [=WildCat's=] cleaver slashes you multiple times. You even have the option of being taught the move "Chop-Chop", which is pretty much this trope as an attack, by the chef after defeating him.
55* ''VideoGame/BugFables'': Kut the [[SlayingMantis mantis]] chef in the Golden Settlement can prepare meals for the party hibachi-style in a knife-slashing BigBallOfViolence. Funnily, he does this with various bug-sized ingredients that wouldn't usually need to be chopped up in real life, including leaves, honey, and ''water droplets''.
56* ''VideoGame/ClayFighter 63⅓'': One of the many stereotypes displayed by Chinese ChefOfIron Kung Pow is the flamboyant swinging around of cleavers, as shown through both his intro animation and one of his [[FinishingMove Claytalities]].
57* ''VideoGame/DeadOrAlive'': There's a bit of animation showing Hitomi slicing veggies midair to make an omelet.
58* In ''VideoGame/MonsterHunterRise'', the Gathering Hub animation for a pre-hunt meal involves a Felyne drawing a knife and using it to cut a large ball of dough into tiny pieces at lightning speed then resheathing his knife like an IaijutsuPractitioner, just before his colleagues leap through the air to catch the pieces to reassemble them into dango.
59* In ''VideoGame/{{Okami}}'', sidequest [=NPC=] Chef Umi's Cyclone Slice is exactly what it sounds like: slashing at a marlin ''that's bigger than he is'' fast enough to levitate it in a tornado of RazorWind and having it land as five perfectly arranged sashimi platters, each decorated with a smaller marlin's head and tail.
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61[[AC:WebAnimation]]
62* Referenced in [[WebAnimation/ZeroPunctuation Yahtzee's]] review of ''VideoGame/AmnesiaTheDarkDescent'', where the only way to survive monster encounters "is to flee like a man in an expensive suit from a teppanyaki restaurant."
63-->'''Imp in a chef's hat:''' CATCH THE FUCKING EGG
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65[[AC:Webcomics]]
66* In ''Webcomic/KevinAndKell'', a chef of this type [[https://www.kevinandkell.com/2002/kk0516.html costs Vin part of his tail]]. [[spoiler:This leads to the discovery that he's Rudy's half-brother, their now-late father having cheated on Kell.]]
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68[[AC:WesternAnimation]]
69* In the second episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfSamAndMaxFreelancePolice'', the episode opens at an elementary school holding "Career Day", where one of the professionals is a sushi chef wearing golden samurai armor, who upon being introduced, immediately draws his katanas and leaps around the room screaming like a maniac.
70* In the ''WesternAnimation/{{Duckman}}'' episode "About Face", the titular Duck takes his butt-ugly date to a place featuring one of these, who happily chops away... Including after Duckman induces a power outage so he doesn't have to see his date's face. Various people are heard screaming about the chef cutting things ''other'' than the food.
71* Mojo Jojo does a hibachi-grill routine while cooking for ''WesternAnimation/{{The Powerpuff Girls|1998}}'' when he has to babysit them. He professes to be "the best chef in Townsville", yet despite amazing the girls with knife-based stunts, they hate his food.
72* In ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' episode "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS2E11OneFishTwoFishBlowfishBlueFish One Fish, Two Fish, Blow Fish, Blue Fish]]", the master sushi chef is shown swinging a knife around, tossing fish up in the air, and slicing through it several times while it hangs in midair. By contrast, the assistant sushi chef does no such thing while preparing Homer's ''fugu'' -- he's too nervous and overwhelmed to make any such motions.
73* In the ''WesternAnimation/WeBareBears'' episode "Losing Ice," Ice Bear is shown to be very skilled in cooking this way. His prowess gets him a job at the local Japanese restaurant Teppan Yaki, where he amazes the customers with his high-flying knife twirls.
74* In ''WesternAnimation/SolarOpposites'', [[ChefOfIron Cherie's proficiency with knives]] is justified by her background as a Benihana chef.

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