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11 traditional Japanese snacks to try on your next trip to Japan​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 20, 2025, 14:00 IST
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11 traditional Japanese snacks to try on your next trip to Japan

In Japan, snacking isn’t mindless grazing, it’s culture. Each bite carries history, season, or symbolism, whether sold sizzling on the street or wrapped in delicate paper at a tea house. They are tiny lessons in craft and care, where presentation is as thoughtful as taste. From crisp rice crackers to jewel-like jellies, traditional Japanese snacks are less about filling time between meals and more about turning those moments into memories. Scroll down for eleven that capture the spirit of Japan...

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Senbei

A freshly grilled Senbei doesn’t just taste good, it announces itself. The crackle as you bite, followed by the savoury glaze of soy sauce or the whisper of seaweed - it’s the crunch of centuries-old tradition, still sold near temples and shrines.

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Taiyaki

Shaped like a sea bream, a fish tied to good fortune, Taiyaki is golden, crisp, and filled with treasures like red bean paste, custard, or even chocolate. Street vendors hand them over hot, each one a bite of warmth and whimsy.

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Dorayaki

Two pillowy pancakes sandwiching a layer of sweet red bean paste - Dorayaki is comfort food at its simplest. For many, it tastes like school days and childhood snacks, thanks to Doraemon, Japan’s most beloved cartoon cat, who couldn’t resist them either.

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Mochi

Chewy, elastic, almost cloud-like, Mochi is more about texture than flavour. Sometimes dusted with kinako (roasted soybean flour), sometimes hiding a fresh strawberry, it appears everywhere - at New Year ceremonies, spring festivals, and family kitchens where rice is still pounded by hand.

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Yokan

Slice into Yokan and you’ll find a glossy block made of red bean, agar, and sugar. Elegant and understated, it’s often served in slim slices with green tea. More refined than rich, it’s proof that sweetness in Japan is about restraint, not excess.

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Karinto

These brown sugar-coated sticks look humble but taste like nostalgia. Hard on the outside, tender inside, Karinto is an old-fashioned sweet still loved by grandparents - though its caramel-like crunch makes it timeless.

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Manju

Small, soft buns filled with red bean paste, Manju appear everywhere from temple fairs to family celebrations. Some are steamed, others baked or fried, with each region putting its own spin on this simple, enduring snack.

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Dango

Chewy rice dumplings threaded on a skewer, brushed with sweet soy sauce, and grilled until caramelised - Dango is best eaten hot, straight off the stick. It’s festival food at its friendliest, made for sharing in the open air.

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Kaki no Tane

Tiny crescent-shaped rice crackers with a hint of spice, often mixed with peanuts, Kaki no Tane is Japan’s go-to beer snack. Salty, crunchy, and addictive, it’s less ceremony, more guilty pleasure - but no less iconic.

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Higashi

Delicate, pastel-coloured confections shaped like flowers, leaves, or fans, Higashi are made from pressed sugar and rice flour. They dissolve gently on the tongue during tea ceremonies, where beauty and transience matter as much as taste.

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Castella

Introduced by Portuguese traders in the 1500s, Castella became Japan’s own honeyed sponge cake. In Nagasaki, it’s sold in long golden loaves, soft and simple yet steeped in history - a sweet reminder of Japan’s first brush with the wider world.

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Copyright © Jun 5, 2026, 01.46AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service