All lists
All lists

🍱 Ikinari dango

· 📍 Kumamoto
🍱 Local Cuisines

Ikinari dango" is a simple local snack made by wrapping sliced sweet potatoes in flour dough and steaming them. Because of the volcanic ash in Otsu, the largest producer of sweet potatoes in the prefecture, and other areas around the foot of Mt. Aso, farmers in the Kikuchi Plain and Kumamoto Plain used to make these dumplings as a snack to eat during the fall farming season when sweet potatoes are harvested. The word "ikinari" in "ikinari dango" means "easy, quick, or immediately" in the Kumamoto dialect, and the origin of the name is said to be that the dumplings can be made quickly and easily, and can be served immediately even when there are sudden visitors. The dough for the skin is made of wheat flour and dango flour (and salt), but in the days when rice was precious, it was made of wheat flour only. A few decades ago, azuki bean paste was added to the filling, and it has become a mainstream item because of its popularity with the sweetness of the azuki bean paste and the saltiness of the dough, which goes well with the crunchy sweet potatoes. Recently, the dough has been mixed with mugwort and brown sugar, sprinkled with soybean flour, and filled with purple sweet potatoes, chestnuts, walnuts, and other ingredients, with variations gradually increasing. Although originally a warm snack to be eaten freshly made, cold ikinari dumplings made from frozen dumplings and eaten half-frozen have also made their appearance.

Where to eat🗺️ Google Maps🍽 Tabelog
🗼 Explore famous spots →
MAFF PDL1.0出典:農林水産省
Ikinari dango · Sansaku