Kuri Okowa Sweet Chestnut Sticky Rice Autumn Festival
Japan; autumn harvest festival tradition; Kyoto and national tradition for moon-viewing season
Kuri okowa is steamed glutinous rice (mochigome) combined with whole peeled chestnuts (kuri), cooked together until the chestnuts become tender and the glutinous rice achieves its characteristic sticky, chewy texture. The dish is an essential autumn festival food, representing the harvest season and appearing at autumn moon viewing (tsukimi) gatherings, autumn matsuri (festivals), and as part of osechi preparations. The preparation requires soaking the glutinous rice overnight, then layering with peeled raw chestnuts and a seasoned liquid (dashi, soy, mirin, sake, salt) before steam-cooking in a steamer for 40-50 minutes. The chestnuts turn golden and their natural sweetness is absorbed by the rice, creating a harmony of earthy-sweet chestnut flavor with the substantial, slightly sweet glutinous rice. Black sesame seeds (kurogoma) are scattered over the finished dish for visual contrast and flavor depth. The dish appears throughout Japan in autumn but Kyoto's version tends to be more delicately seasoned. A simpler home version uses a rice cooker with glutinous rice setting. The seasonal meaning—harvest, abundance, natural sweetness before winter—is embedded in every serving.