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Hanabiramochi is a Japanese sweet usually eaten at the beginning of the year. Kuzumochi are mochi cakes made of kuzuko . Manjū is a popular traditional Japanese confection; most have an outside made from flour , rice powder and buckwheat and a filling of red bean paste, made from boiled azuki beans and sugar.
Cream Box (クリームボックス) is a Japanese sweet from Kōriyama, Fukushima. It is a sweet bread that originated in Koriyama City, Fukushima Prefecture. It is said to have been created in 1976 at the bakery "Romeo" in the city.
Tokyo Banana (東京ばな奈, also written 東京バナナ or 東京ばなな with the same pronunciation) is a Japanese banana-shaped sponge cake with cream filling. It is the official souvenir sweet of Tokyo and is manufactured and sold by Grapestone Co. . Tokyo Bananas come in many different flavors and are usually packaged individually in ...
Fujiya Co. Ltd. (株式会社不二家, Kabushiki Gaisha Fujiya) (TYO: 2211) is a nationwide chain of confectionery stores and restaurants in Japan. Its first shop was founded in 1910 in Yokohama. [2] Fujiya is credited with introducing the Christmas cake to Japan. [3] In 2016, the company opened its first store outside Japan in Taipei, Taiwan. [4]
The restaurant has also served a vegan option with oat milk, which Jackson-Glidden said in 2022 was the city's only dairy-free milk bread option. The menu has also included Japanese fruit sandwiches with milk bread and whipped cream , dorayaki , macarons (such as pistachio and ume varieties), matcha and miso croissants , mochi doughnuts, and ...
In Japan, the word for sweets or confectionery, kashi (菓子), originally referred to fruits and nuts. [5] Fruits and nuts may be eaten as snacks between meals and served as "sweets" during a tea ceremony. [6] The word Wa means "Japanese", and kashi becomes gashi in compound words, wagashi therefore means "Japanese confectionery". [6] [7]
Anpan (あんパン, 餡 ( あん ) パン) is a Japanese sweet roll most commonly filled with red bean paste. Anpan can also be prepared with other fillings, including white beans ( shiro-an ), green beans ( uguisu-an ), sesame ( goma-an ), and chestnuts ( kuri-an ).
A Japanese edition Kit Kat. The messages translate to "As usual!" (top) and "At your own pace!" (bottom) Kit Kats were introduced to Japan in 1973 when British confectioner Rowntree's made an agreement with Japanese confectioner and restaurant owner Fujiya. [2] In 2014, they were the top-selling confection in the country. [5]