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Mochi and matcha ice-cream

Japanese mochi rice cakes (New Year’s sweets)

Happy New Year 2018!
Since the New Year has just started, I thought it would be nice to share with you some New Year’s culinary Japanese traditions. The first of these concerns Japanese mochi / omochi rice cakes. Below you’ll find basic information about mochi and daifuku (“stuffed mochi“), motchitsuki tradition as well as the link to the recipe for these traditional Japanese sweets.

Japanese mochi rice cakes

 

Japanese omochi (お 餅, with the prefix o-) or simply mochi (餅) are the sweet rice cakes (though there are also salty mochi). Some people define them as “sweet rice noodles”, but in my opinion the term “cakes” is more accurate. Mochi usually have shape of a ball or flattened ball. They are made of elastic mass of cooked rice and rice flour (so-called mochiko). Although mochi are eaten all year round, they are associated with the celebration of the New Year, or rather the farewell of the old year. And this is the time when really huge amounts of these delicacies are prepared and consumed.

Japanese mochi and matcha ice-cream
Japanese mochi served with matcha ice-cream

Mochi and daifuku flavors

There are many flavors of mochi. One of them is matcha (in such case the rice mass contains also the powdered green tea). Also the mochi balls can be filled with different fillings. In such case the cakes are bigger and are called daifuku (大福). I think that my most favourite types of daifuku are classic daifuku with anko (i.e. the sweet paste of red azuki beans), wormwood daifuku and daifuku with fresh strawberries (available in spring and summer). Though in Japan you will find many flavors and fillings of those rice cakes, like for instance:

  • plum & anko (ume daifuku, 梅大福),
  • Japanese citron (yuzu daifuku, 柚子大福),
  • mango (mangō daifuku, マンゴー大福))
  • salty (shio daifuku, 塩大福),
  • with the whole beans (mame daifuku, 豆大福),
  • with ice-cream (like Lotte’s Yukimi Daifuku, 雪見だいふく).

or already mentioned:

  • wormwood (yomogi daifuku, よもぎ大福),
  • matcha green tea (matcha daifuku, 抹茶大福),
  • strawberry & anko or fresh strawberry (ichigo daifuku, いちご大福).

In addition, I have also seen and tried daifuku coated in black sesame (goma) or soy powder (kinako). And I really liked them, too.

Japanese mochi rice cakes: Eating Japanese strawberry daifuku (ichigo daifuku)
Eating my favourite fresh strawberry daifuku (ichigo daifuku)

Where to buy delicious mochi and daifuku in Tokyo

You can buy mochi and daifuku at street stands, in food-street stalls, supermarkets or in so-called kombini (convenience stores) like 7-Eleven or Lawson. Though two of my most favorite spots with daifuku in Tokyo are:

  • a booth by the alley leading from the outside gate to the inner gate of the Senso-ji temple in Asakusa (just behind the outer gate on the right),
  • the street-stand by one of the inner alleys in the outside commercial part of the Tsukiji fish market.

Visiting Asakusa, be sure to try green daifuku with the herbs of wormwood.  While at Tsukiji you’ll find an amazing choice of daifuku with seasonal ingredients, including strawberries (ichigo), mango (mango), “Japanese citron” – yuzu, etc.

Japanese mochi rice cakes: strawberry daifuku (ichigo daifuku) at Tsukiji market, Tokyo, Japan
Strawberry daifuku (ichigo daifuku) at Tsukiji market, Tokyo, Japan
  • A famous spot with salty shio daifuku is located at Sugamo Jizo-dori shopping street in Harajuku.

Japanese mochi and daifuku recipe

Want to prepare these rice sweets by yourself? Here you’ll find the easy recipe for mochi and daifuku that assumes the use of sticky rice flour instead of the mix of rice flour and boiled rice.

New Year’s mochi preparation – mochitsuki

The New Year’s mochi are prepared in the special way. The boiled rice mass is ritually pounded in special containers with special rammers during the ceremony of mochitsuki. The mass is pounded by two people who quickly and alternately hit it. Watch a video showing the actions of the fastest mochi makers in Japan.

Mochi is also often put into ozoni soup – the special soup served in the morning on New Year’s Day as a part of the meal called osechi.

Sweet rice cakes eaten in China and Taiwan to celebrate
the Chinese New Year

Similar sweet rice cakes are also made and eaten in China, Taiwan and in other countries where old Chinese traditions are celebrated. Eating them is also a way to celebrate the Chinese New Year.

I had the pleasure to try the Taiwanese version of those rice cakes. My Chinese language teacher, Vera (see Vera’s blog), who is from Taiwan, prepared them to celebrate the beginning of Year of the Rooster. The idea of the preparation of those cakes is similar. Yet, they contain brown sugar and have light brown colour. And they are much sweeter than the Japanese mochi! But they still taste great!

Chapssalddeok – sweet Korean rice cakes

The rice cakes filled with sweet red bean paste are also eaten in Korea. The Korean version is called chapssalddeok (찹쌀떡). They are just as delicious as Japanese daifuku. I know that because I used to eat them in Seoul, South Korea.


Extras:

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