Japanese Setsubun Cuisine: Seasonal Demon-Driving Food Traditions
Japan (Osaka origin for ehomaki; national mamemaki tradition from Heian period)
Setsubun (3 February, the traditional eve of spring) is one of Japan's most food-specific festivals, centred on mamemaki (bean scattering) and the consumption of roasted soybeans to drive out demons (oni) and invite good fortune. Each household member eats one bean per year of their age plus one extra for luck. Since approximately 1998, the ehomaki (lucky direction sushi roll) tradition — eating an uncut futomaki roll in silence while facing the year's auspicious compass direction — has spread nationally from its Osaka origins. Setsubun cuisine encodes ancient Chinese directional cosmology (onmyōdō), seasonal food magic, and the agricultural-calendar anxiety surrounding the transition from winter to spring. The full setsubun spread includes sardine heads grilled and displayed on holly branches (to repel oni), sake consumed warm (kanzake), and in Kansai, kenchin-jiru eaten as a fortifying winter soup before the bean-scattering ritual.