graupel

Japanese confectionery

graupel(Arare/arare)

hospitalityrice cracker

It is a rice cracker made from glutinous rice, and named “arare” because of its similarity in shape to the hail that falls from the sky in winter. The only difference between “arare” and “okaki,” which is also made from glutinous rice, is the size. While arare are small grains, okaki are usually larger than 5 cm in diameter. However, in the old days, arare and okaki were two different things.

Arare was a food served at the court during the Nara period (710-794), and was made by frying rice grains. It is said that arare was a different food from modern arare. Okaki, on the other hand, was made by chipping the Kagamimochi (mirror-shaped rice cake) with a mallet or by hand after the New Year, frying it or baking it, and eating it. The reason for chipping with a mallet or by hand is said to be because people considered it bad luck to cut it with a knife and abhorred it.

新着・おすすめ情報

  1. temple in honor of Daikokuten

  2. What kind of sake brewing method is “mizu-hashiroshi”? Words related to sake

  3. Aoyama Cemetery (Minami Aoyama, Tokyo)

  4. type of informal katakana worn in the Edo period

  5. Kiyosubashi Bridge (Kiyosumi-Shirakawa, Tokyo)

  6. What is “Katahira”? What kind of process is it? Words related to Sake

  7. What does a “Hands and Feet Master” do? The series of craftsmen who make dolls

  8. Koishikawa Korakuen

  9. Bank of Japan

  10. 【イベント開催】豊かな自然と伝統のまち与謝野町で非日常の体験

  11. halberd

  12. Eating Doze soup every day to check the taste. The current owner of Komagata Dozeu, a famous restaurant that has been in business since the Edo period, demonstrates his commitment to preserving the taste of his products.

  13. A parting gift for someone who is retiring or moving on. What is the market price, how to choose, and what is the etiquette for giving gifts?

  14. What is meant by “santai zorai” offered for the May dolls?

  15. You can do it yourself! How to Tie a Yukata Obi – Bunko Knot