
Having to taste different flavors that surprisingly suit your palate is one of the perks of living abroad. Right now, I’d like to recommend a Japanese confectionery that you might love. The sweets are also best as gifts. Fortunately, Kanesue Sweets just opened another branch right at our nearest station (Minamiurawa Station) last month. This company has been around for over 50 years. What I like about their products is that they’re made with locally produced ingredients.
Here are 3 of their sweet masterpieces. Brilliantly made and probed by skilled and devoted craftsmen. Be it known that their catalog is in Japanese, so I’ll do the best I can to kind of reword the translation to make sense.

Store Price: ¥320 per piece
(Monde Selection Silver Award 2014 Winner)
A buttered sweet potato that’s carefully baked one by one. When you sniff it, you can’t only sense the aroma of butter but also a faint smell of rum accentuates.
This was indeed a new flavor for me! (In the Philippines, I’d enjoy our caramelized sweet potato.) I like that it wasn’t too sweet. A bit tricky at first, but after a few more bites my mouth wholeheartedly embraced the unfamiliar taste! I guess this absolutely deserves the award.

Store Price: ¥1,100 per box
(Monde Selection Silver Award 2014 Winner)
An extremely genuine-oriented bracken (warabi, 蕨) rice cake used with a special ingredient from Sanuki (a city located in Kagawa Prefecture) and a unique sugar-containing syrup. The stiffness of the bracken powder and the harmony of plenty of flour are exquisite.
The softest mochi (glutinous rice cake) that I’ve ever had. Unlike the other ones that I’ve tried before, these tender sweets didn’t give me a hard time chewing them. The level of sweetness was just right for me. So fulfilling!

Store Price: ¥360 per piece
Sanuki glutinous rice cake of high quality and carefully punched with walnut and strawberry sauce. Contains a whole piece of tasty strawberry.
Strawberry (ichigo, いちご) daifuku is just one of the many kinds of daifuku (大福) which refers to a Japanese confection made up of a small round mochi stuffed with sweet filling. Anko, a sweetened red bean paste made from azuki beans is most commonly used.
Oh this was superb! Chewing both the mochi and strawberry at the same time was like a duo singing in harmony inside my mouth.
I don’t want to elaborate things here. Should you have the chance to try, don’t miss it!
Other shops that are accessible from Tokyo are located in Ikebukuro Station (2 shops, one is by the North Gate), Haneda Airport and Asakusa.
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What a coincidence !
I made ichigodaifuku last week.
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Oh! Would love to try yours! 😀
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Sure !
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Worth to read all of your posts! Thank you for allowing me to promote here hehe. Hey guys I’m new here, can you just check my own personal blog,share,follow and like. Much appreciated 😊 thanks @sheryl just keep doing what you want xoxo 💋
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Right back at you, Mich! 😉
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Yes they look delectable! Again this is the combination of taste and presentation. They seem to have perfected it
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Japan’s work of art. ^_^
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Everytime we are in Japan we will take all the photos of our meals and also the products in the shops. Because that is a tour in itself
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Couldn’t agree more!
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Ooh! I love all of them, but that last one with the strawberry looks the best. It’s definitely the one I’d go fot 😀
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Yeah! That one is highly recommended! 😉
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Hmmmm, indeed! I’d never heard of braken (warabi) – it seems to be a powder made from fern roots. I think I’d like to try the warabimochi – sounds (and looks) very different to normal mochi 🙂
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Me neither! 😀 One of a kind!
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