Wagashi Tea Ceremony Confection Design
Japan (Kyoto tea ceremony tradition; Urasenke and Omotesenke schools; Edo wagashi culture)
Wagashi (和菓子) prepared for the tea ceremony (sadō or chadō) represents the highest expression of Japanese confectionery art — these sweets are not merely delicious but function as the visual, seasonal, and emotional prelude to the moment of drinking matcha. The wagashi maker's task is to communicate a season, a feeling, a landscape, or a poem through a small hand-formed confection that will be consumed before tea. The forms used — nerikiri (kneaded white bean paste), namagashi (fresh confection), higashi (dried sugar confection), and yokan (agar-set bean paste) — all serve the same purpose: to offer a controlled sweetness that prepares the palate for the bitter matcha, and to present a seasonal image that enhances the meditative atmosphere. Tea masters select wagashi that correspond to the month's themes: cherry blossoms in March-April, maple leaves in November, snow-covered mountains in winter. The wagashi is placed on a kaishi (paper napkin) and eaten in two or three deliberate bites before the tea bowl is presented. The craft demands both technical skill and literary sensibility — the wagashi maker must understand the seasonal poetry that gives each confection its name.