I stopped in for lunch today at Mitsuwa and was delighted to see the seasonal offering table COVERED in
wagashi from Japan. The official start date of the sweets weekend sale is tomorrow, but I bought a few boxes of different treats -
Aki no Otabe filled with Chestnut or sweet potato (Kyoto),
Habutae Mochi (Fukui), and
Karukan Manjyu (Kagoshima). They have an excellent selection with lots of different regional specialties from all over Japan. I was feeling super
natsukashii, so it was great to walk in and select some of my favorites.
For those not familar with wagashi, or Japanese-style Japanese sweets: every city, particularly those with a tourist attraction of note, have a special sweet (
meibutsu, or specialty) that reflects history, local ingredients, and/or seasons. When one travels in Japan, it is customary to buy boxes of these sweets to bring back to colleagues at work, family, or friends (or everyone). The boxes themselves are quite attractive and wrapped in paper. Of course, buying the airfreighted sweets from Mitsuwa is no comparison to buying them freshly-made in Japan, but for those of us not living near a traditional wagashi-ya (NYC, LA) it is the closest we can come to tasting a bit of nostalgia.
Here's a pretty great article on a westerner trying to learn to make wagashi.
The sale officially runs October 7-10th.