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  2. Botamochi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botamochi

    Botamochi (ぼたもち or 牡丹餅) is a wagashi (Japanese confection) made with glutinous rice, white rice (ratio of 7:3, or only glutinous rice), and sweet azuki paste (red bean paste). They are made by soaking the rice for approximately 1 hour. The rice is then cooked, and a thick azuki paste is hand-packed around pre-formed balls of rice.

  3. Botan Rice Candy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botan_Rice_Candy

    Botan Rice Candy is a specific brand of a category of Japanese candy called bontan ame (ボンタンアメ). Bontan ame are soft, chewy, citrus-flavored candy with an outer layer of rice paper or Oblaat. The rice paper is clear and plastic-like when dry, but it is edible and dissolves in the mouth. This candy was invented by Seika Foods in 1924 ...

  4. List of Japanese ingredients - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_ingredients

    Rice. Short or medium grain white rice. Regular (non-sticky) rice is called uruchi-mai. Mochi rice (glutinous rice)-sticky rice, sweet rice; Genmai (brown rice) Rice bran (nuka) – not usually eaten itself, but used for pickling, and also added to boiling water to parboil tart vegetables; Arare – toasted brown rice grains in genmai cha and ...

  5. Japanese rice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_rice

    Haigamai is rice that has been partially milled to remove most of the bran but leave the germ intact. It takes less time to cook than brown rice but retains more of the vitamins than white rice. Coin-operated automated rice polishing machines, called seimaijo (精米所), for polishing brown rice, are a common sight in rural Japan. The rice ...

  6. Bento - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bento

    A typical bento bought from a grocery store. A bento (弁当, bentō, Kyūjitai: 辨當) [1] is a Japanese-style single-portion take-out or home-packed meal, often for lunch, typically including rice and packaged in a box with a lid (often a segmented box with different parts of the meal placed in different sections).

  7. Kamaboko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamaboko

    Click [show] for important translation instructions. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate , is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.

  8. Customs and etiquette in Japanese dining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customs_and_etiquette_in...

    Having the rice absorb shoyu too much would change the original taste of the nigiri-sushi, and trying to dip rice into the shoyu may cause the whole sushi to fall apart, dropping rice in the shoyu plate. The appearance of rice floating around on the shoyu plate is not considered a taboo in Japanese culture, but it may leave a bad impression. [35]

  9. Takikomi gohan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takikomi_gohan

    Rice was scarce then, so people conserved rice by adding millet or other cereals, wild vegetables, yam or Japanese radish, creating an early form of takikomi gohan called katemeshi. [4] During the Muromachi period , katemeshi became popular, turned into a dish called kawarimeshi using ingredients such as barley, beans, and vegetables.