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Dorayaki

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Alternative names
  
Mikasa

Place of origin
  
Main ingredients
  
Castella, Red bean paste

Dorayaki wwwjustonecookbookcomwpcontentuploads201110

Similar
  
Wagashi, Daifuku, Sweet bean paste, Manjū, Red bean paste

Dora cakes dorayaki dora pancakes kid s favourite food recipe children s day special


Dorayaki (どら焼き, どらやき, 銅鑼焼き, ドラ焼き) is a type of Japanese confection, а red-bean pancake which consists of two small pancake-like patties made from castella wrapped around a filling of sweet Azuki red bean paste. Dorayaki are similar to Imagawayaki, but the latter are cooked with the batter completely surrounding the bean paste filling and are often served hot.

Contents

Dorayaki Dorayaki Recipe Just One Cookbook

The original Dorayaki consisted of only one layer. Its current shape was invented in 1914 by Usagiya in the Ueno district of Tokyo.

Dorayaki Dorayaki Japanese Pancake Mr Aizat

In Japanese, dora means "gong", and because of the similarity of the shapes, this is probably the origin of the name of the sweet. Legend has it that the first Dorayaki were made when a samurai named Benkei forgot his gong (dora) upon leaving a farmer’s home where he was hiding and the farmer subsequently used the gong to fry the pancakes, thus the name Dorayaki.

Dorayaki Dorayaki Japanese Pancake Mr Aizat

Dorayaki


Another name

Dorayaki Dorayaki Japanese Sweet Pancake Dorayaki YouTube

In Kansai area, such as Osaka or Nara, this sweet is often called mikasa (三笠). The word originally means triple straw hat, but also an alternative name of Mount Wakakusa, a low hill with gentle slope located in Nara. Many local people picture the shape of this hill while eating a mikasa. In Nara, a larger mikasa of about 30 cm in diameter is famous.

Dorayaki How To Make Dorayaki Recipe YouTube

The Japanese manga and anime character Doraemon loves dorayaki and so it is depicted as his favorite food (in the English dub, Nobita (Noby) calls it "yummy buns" as an alternative), and it has been a plot device several times throughout the series. Doraemon is addicted to dorayaki and falls for any trap involving them. Since 2000, the company Bunmeido has been selling a limited version of dorayaki called Doraemon Dorayaki every year around March and September. Since 2015, JFC International has produced Doraemon Dorayaki for the North American market.

Dorayaki Dorayaki Wikipedia

In 2015 filmmaker Naomi Kawase released the film "An" ("Sweet Bean") about an elderly woman who has a secret recipe for truly transcendent dorayaki.

A popular Internet meme features a picture of Oolong the rabbit seen balancing a dorayaki on his head.

References

Dorayaki Wikipedia