Hanabiramochi
Hanabiramochi (葩餅) is a Japanese sweet (wagashi), usually eaten at the beginning of the year.[1] Hanabiramochi are also served at the first tea ceremony of the new year.[2]
Type | Wagashi |
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Place of origin | Japan |
Main ingredients | Mochi, miso, Gyūhi, burdock |
Origin
The name "hanabiramochi" literally means "flower petal mochi". The original form of Hanabiramochi is Hishihanabira, a dessert that was eaten by the Imperial family at special events coinciding with the beginning of the year.
Hanabiramochi was first made in the Meiji Era (8 September 1868 – 30 July 1912), but it is now a familiar New Year wagashi.
Form
The exact shape of hanabiramochi is strictly defined by tradition. The white mochi covering is flat and round, folded over to form a semicircular shape, and must have a pink color showing through in the center of the confection, fading to a white at the edge. Unlike a daifuku, the mochi must not completely seal the insides.
In the center of a hanabiramochi is a layer of anko, a sweet bean paste, commonly the white kind made from sweetened mung beans. In the very center is a thin strip of sweetly flavoured gobo (burdock), which protrudes from the mochi on both sides.
Significance and symbolism
Each element of the hanabiramochi is significant:
The red colour showing through the white mochi is not only appropriate to the celebration of the new year, but also evokes the Japanese apricot/plum (ume) blossom, which in turn represents the purity, perseverance, and renewal associated with the New Year.
The gobo represents pressed ayu, a fish exclusive to East Asia, and a prayer for a long life.
See also
References
- He, Yiting (2018). "Culinary Integration and Sweet Imagination: The Case of Japanese Confectionery under Globalisation".
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(help) - Helstosky, Carol (ed.). The Routledge History of Food. doi:10.4324/9781315753454.