Anpan and Japanese Filled Sweet Bread Tradition
Japan (Ginza, Tokyo — Kimuraya Sōhonten, 1875; nationwide adoption through Meiji era)
Anpan (あんパン) is Japan's signature filled sweet roll — a soft, milk-enriched bread bun (shokupan-adjacent in texture) encasing a generous quantity of sweet anko (red bean paste) — and represents the first successful Japanese adaptation of Western bread-baking technique to local ingredient traditions. Created in 1875 by Kimuraya Sōhonten bakery in Ginza, Tokyo, anpan was famously presented to Emperor Meiji, gaining imperial endorsement and setting off Japan's bread confectionery revolution. The dough uses enriched Japanese milk bread formula with a small amount of sake lees in the original Kimuraya recipe, producing a distinctive gentle fermentation note. Tsubuan (chunky) and koshian (smooth) versions serve different markets; sakura anpan with whole salt-pickled cherry blossom pressed into the top remains Kimuraya's iconic seasonal product. Beyond anpan, Japan's pan (パン, bread) culture encompasses cream pan (pastry cream filled), melon pan (streusel-topped milk bread), curry pan (deep-fried filled with Japanese curry), and jamPan. Each filling tradition spawned countless regional variations. The soft, pillowy texture of Japanese filled breads contrasts with European enriched doughs — Japanese versions prioritise extreme tenderness over structure, using the Yudane or tangzhong starch-gelatinisation technique.