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🍱 Casa Muchi

· 📍 Okinawa
🍱 Local Cuisines

“Casa muchi” (also called muchi, casa muchi, onimochi) is a steamed rice cake wrapped in a shell ginger leaf. It is offered to the gods to dispel evil spirits on December 8th of the lunar calendar, an annual event in which the health of the family is prayed for. The origin of the name “onimochi” is based on folklore, and is said to be from folk tales which remain in Shurikinjocho. A brother and sister lost their parents at an early age, and when the sister came of age and married, her brother who lived slovenly by himself became a demon who ate not only livestock but children. In an attempt to do something, the sister made his beloved rice cake and put steel inside, and while he ate it she pushed him from a cliff and eradicated him. The fragrant smell of the shell ginger leaf when steaming the rice cake acts as a purifier which wafts through the house. From the demon-dispelling episode, the custom remains to sprinkle the water used to steam the rice cake around the house, tie the shell ginger leaf in a cross shape and hang it on eaves and places where people enter and exit in order to ward off evil. Recently, not only has there been white muchi made simply from sticky rice flour, but also many variations based on region and family, such as ones which use brown sugar, purple yam, or sorghum. Casa muchi is an indispensable winter food in Okinawa, and a true feature of the season. The first muchi after a boy's birth is celebrated with kamuchi, an especially large muchi made with a Chinese fan palm leaf. Additionally, regardless of gender, the first muchi that a child has is called “hatsu muchi”, and it is customarily given out to relatives and neighbors.

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MAFF PDL1.0出典:農林水産省
Casa Muchi · Sansaku