Japan (nationwide; New Year tradition; Nara's Nakatanidou famous for performance pounding; originating Yayoi period)
Mochitsuki (餅つき, 'mochi pounding') is the traditional Japanese ritual of making mochi by steaming glutinous rice (mochigome) until fully cooked, then transferring it to a stone or wooden mortar (usu) and pounding rhythmically with wooden mallets (kine) in a two-person coordinated process — one pounding while the other turns and wets the rice between strokes. The pounding converts cooked glutinous rice into a completely smooth, elastic, cohesive mass through mechanical rupture of the cell walls and the alignment of the long-chain starch molecules (amylopectin predominant in mochigome vs amylose in standard rice). Traditional mochitsuki is a New Year's ritual (oshōgatsu mochi-tsuki) performed in the days before January 1st, producing kagami-mochi (mirror rice cake) — two stacked round mochi discs with a bitter orange (daidai) on top, placed as offering on the household kamidana altar. Premium mochi from traditional producers like Nakatanidou in Nara is famous for its extremely vigorous, high-speed mochi pounding performance. Mochi is also prepared year-round in machine-pounded form for sakura mochi (spring), kusa mochi (mugwort, spring), and ohagi (autumn — azuki bean paste wrapped around slightly-pounded rice). The texture of properly made mochi — smooth, elastic, chewy without being sticky to fingers — is distinct from machine-processed.
Pure, neutral, subtly sweet glutinous rice; elastic, chewy, satisfying; takes on flavours of accompaniments (anko, kinako, soy) beautifully; seasonal forms add herb or bean variations
{"Mochigome must be soaked 8+ hours, steamed not boiled — excess water prevents proper pounding cohesion","Initial 'crushing' stage before rhythmic pounding — breaks individual grains before alignment begins","Both mallets and hands must be kept wet with water — dry pounding tears the mochi surface","Pounding is complete when no individual grain can be felt or seen — fully smooth and homogeneous","Shape while still warm — mochi hardens rapidly as temperature drops"}
{"Home machine mochi making (mochi maker appliances) achieves 80% of traditional texture with significantly less effort","For kagami-mochi: shape into two round discs with a slight dome; the bottom disk larger than top","Mochi storage: dust with cornstarch or katakuriko to prevent sticking; keep cool and dry","Kiri-mochi (pre-cut commercial mochi): excellent for ozoni New Year soup — grills or toasts beautifully"}
{"Under-soaking mochigome — hard grains resist pounding and produce uneven texture","Insufficient steaming — partially cooked grains remain as hard lumps after pounding","Dry mallet/hands during pounding — surface tears and becomes sticky rather than smooth elastic mass","Attempting to pound cooled mochi — it must be worked while steaming hot for proper alignment"}
Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art — Shizuo Tsuji; Japanese Farm Food — Nancy Singleton Hachisu