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Tuesday, December 5, 2017

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Kakig?ri (???) is a Japanese shaved ice dessert flavored with syrup and a sweetener, often condensed milk.

Popular flavors include strawberry, cherry, lemon, green tea, grape, melon, "Blue Hawaii", sweet plum, and colorless syrup. Some shops provide colorful varieties by using two or more different syrups. To sweeten kakig?ri, condensed or evaporated milk is often poured on top of it. It is similar to a snow cone, but with some notable differences: it has a much smoother fluffier ice consistency, much like fresh fallen snow, and a spoon is almost always used to eat it. The traditional way of making kakig?ri uses a hand cranked machine to spin a block of ice over an ice shaving blade. Even though electric ice shavers are most often used, street vendors can still be seen hand-shaving ice blocks in the summer.

In addition to the streets, kakig?ri is sold in festivals, convenience stores, coffee shops, and restaurants. During the hot summer months, kakig?ri is sold virtually everywhere in Japan. Especially at summer festivals and fairs, it is as popular as yakisoba, takoyaki and cotton candy. Kakigôri is one of the summer features in Japan. Some shops serve it with ice cream and sweetened red beans or tapioca pearls.


Video Kakig?ri



Shirokuma

Shirokuma (?? or ????) is a type of kakig?ri, a Japanese dessert made from shaved ice flavored with condensed milk, small colorful mochi, fruits, and sweet bean paste (usually Azuki bean). As for fruits, mandarin orange, cherry, pineapple, raisin are often used to make shirokuma.

Description

Shirokuma has been popular in Kagoshima since the middle of the Edo period and is well-known to many Japanese. Condensed milk, fruits, and sweet bean paste are served over shaved ice. It is eaten in cafés, but also in some department stores, such as Yamakataya (???) or Mujaki.

Etymology

Shirokuma literally means "white bear", and indicates "polar bear" in Japanese. There are some views about the origin of the name.

In one account, there was a cotton shop in Kagoshima city. The shop started to sell kakig?ri as its side-business. The kakig?ri was flavored with condensed milk. When the owner was thinking of a name for the kakig?ri, he noticed the picture of a polar bear was printed on the labels of the condensed milk's can.

Another account is that Mujaki, a coffee shop in Kagoshima City, started to sell the kakig?ri, put milk-syrup, sanshoku-kanten (colorful agar), y?kan (soft azuki-bean jelly), sweet-beans and fruits in a pattern that resembled a polar bear when seen from overhead, so it was named Shirokuma.

Yet others say that it was created in honour of the memory of Saigo Takamori after his battle with the Edo Shogun.

In Kagoshima, some similar name kakig?ri are made. Kurokuma flavored with dark brown unrefined sugar syrup, coffee or caramel syrup and Kiguma flavored with mango pulp syrup are made in some coffee shops.

Availability

Supermarkets in southern Kyushu, especially in Kagoshima City, Kagoshima, and mom-and-pop candy stores sell shirokuma as a popular product. It is sold in different types. Shirokuma are often eaten at Kagoshima Fairs which are held in other prefectures. Shirokuma in cups are sold at convenience stores all over Japan.


Maps Kakig?ri



See also

Media related to Kakig?ri at Wikimedia Commons

  • K?rikoppu: The dedicated glassware which was mainly used for Kakig?ri before World War II. (ja)

Similar dishes in other cultures

  • Baobing: a Chinese shaved-ice variant
  • Patbingsu: a Korean shaved-ice variant
  • Halo-halo: a Philippine shaved-ice variant
  • Es campur: an Indonesian shaved-ice variant
  • Es teler: an Indonesian shaved-ice variant
  • Ais Kacang (ABC): a Malaysian shaved-ice variant.
  • Grattachecca: an Italian shaved ice variant popular in Rome.
  • Hawaiian Shave Ice: a Hawaiian shaved-ice variant.

Banna songs - YouTube
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References


Kakigōri - Wikipedia
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External links

  • ???????(Japanese)
  • ???????(Japanese)
  • ?????????:?????(Japanese)
  • ??? ??? (Japanese)
  • Rocket NEWS 24 - You can eat a polar bear in Kagoshima(English)

Source of article : Wikipedia