Case in point: mochi, a chewy little cake made from pounding glutinous rice. (You can see me making some here.) Mochi has a variety of uses, from sweet to savory, but is most famous as a dessert snack.
Daifuku (大福, literally "great fortune") is the most common variety of sweet mochi: it's rice dough, flavored or not, filled with something sweet, like red bean or chestnut. Decent, cheap mochi can be found in almost any grocery store, but the good stuff is a whole lot better and not that much more expensive.
Nana and I have recently become addicted to a little mochi shop by our apartment that, in addition to the standard fare, has some really unusual stuff on offer.
We'll start with some standards, though: white daifuku with a chestnut filling, a block of sweet chestnut rice jelly (similar recipe, just with much lower rice content), and "black" daifuku (黒大福, kurodaifuku) in which the dough has been flavored with molasses.
And that's just the beginning! Below you can see a sweet, pink, almost sandy-textured bit of mochi designed to evoke the autumn cosmos, plus a red bean daifuku infused with yuzu, a regional citrus fruit more commonly used in spice pastes.
The cosmos one was nothing special, but I love the yuzu one on the left! |
Once or twice, Nana and I have even tried some more exotic varieties. For instance, I failed to take a picture of the elusive akajiso daifuku - a red bean rice cake wrapped in red perilla, which is a slightly bitter, leafy herb related to mint.
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