Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Home > Wagashi
Japanese cuisineWagashi (Japanese: 和菓子) is a general term applied to different types of Japanese snacks, especially sweet ones made of sticky rice, fruits, etc. served in Japanese tea ceremonies. Wagashi is a type of snack made from all natural, plant based ingredients that influences all five senses. They are commonly named from natural beauties and a word from ancient literatures.
Wagashi's origin is unclear and they probably have existed as long as people have existed in Japan. In a excavation of a Jomon-era archeological site, the carbonized remains of baked cookies made from chestnut powder was discovered, indicating a possible existence of a snack.
Until sugar was introduced in 16th century, wagashi was sweetened with mizuame, suikazura, and fresh and dried fruits. Diaries and records from these and earlier times write about how treasured dried fruits like persimmons and wild raisins were. Even today, it is well known that the key level of sweetness wagashi must strive for is that of a dried persimmon fruit.
During the Edo period, the production of sugarcane in Okinawa became highly productive, and low quality brown sugar as well as heavily processed white sugar became widely available. Wagashi was a popular gift between samurai much like a good wine and it was even better in a way, one cannot get drunk from eating wagashi. Wagashi is served in a Japanese tea ceremony and having a good seasonal wagashi served is showing your educational background.
1 Types of Wagashi
- Anmitsu
- Anpan
- Bado
- Daifuku
- DangoDumplings Japanese cuisine Related to mochi dango is a Japanese dumpling made from mochiko ( rice flour). It is sticky and filling. It is often served with green tea. Dango is eaten year-round, but its different varieties are traditionally eaten in given
- GinbouJapanese cuisine Gionbou is a Japanese Wagashi(Japanese sweets). It looks just like a dried Japanese persimmon, and can be made by filling candy bean jam in gyuuhi(Turkish delight) and sprinkling white sugar over it. In the time when sugar was still a thi
- HanabiramochiJapanese cuisine Hanabiramochi is a Japanese sweetmeat wagashi , usually eaten in the beginning of the year. It is made by placing a flat red mochi (rice cake) on top of a white one, then folding into a semicircular shape and filling with sweetly flavoure
- Higashi (food)Higashi ( or , dried snack), is a type of wagashi made from ingredients like flour ( wheat, azuki, soybean), mizuame, and sugar ( wasabon). These ingredients are mixed and after several processes, pressed into a patterned wooden mold. They are made into s
- Hoshigaki
- Imagawayaki
- KakigoriJapanese cuisine Kakigori is a Japanese dessert made from shaved ice flavored with syrup. Popular flavors include: strawberry, lemon, green tea, grape, melon, and blue-hawaii. To sweeten it condensed milk is often poured on top of it. Food stalls on festi
- ManjuJapanese cuisine Manju (, ) is a famous confectionery in Japan. There are many varieties. Most have an outside made from flour, rice powder and buckwheat in where the inside is made with an ( bean jam). The an is wrapped around with the outside and shaped
- MatsunoyukiJapanese cuisine Matsunoyuki is a Japanese sweet made by sprinkling grinded caramelo (foam candy) on to a dark green Gyuuhi ( Turkish delight) in the shape of a pine tree. Matsunoyuki is intended to illustrate snow on a pine tree, a symbol of long life an
- MochiFor the pre-Columbian Peruvian culture, see Moche; for the drink, see mocha. Mochi is a food prepared from rice and used as an ingredient in several Japanese recipes. How to cook mochi: # Prepare steamed glutinous rice; # Either pound it in a traditional
- Monaka
- Oshiruko
- Taiyaki
- Uiro
- Yakigashi
- Yookan
Read more »