Japanese Taiyaki Fish-Shaped Waffle Culture Anko Fillings and Street Food Tradition
Japan (Tokyo, Azabu-Jūban; Naniwaya Sōhonten, 1909)
Taiyaki (鯛焼き — sea bream bake) is Japan's most beloved street food confection: a fish-shaped waffle with a thin, slightly crispy wheat batter exterior and a sweet anko (red bean paste) filling, cooked in a cast-iron double-mold that creates the distinctive sea bream (tai) shape. The origins trace to Tokyo's Azabu-Jūban neighbourhood in 1909, where Naniwaya Sōhonten first began selling the confection — replacing the more expensive monaka shell with fresh-cooked batter to reduce costs while increasing freshness appeal. The tai (sea bream) shape was chosen specifically because sea bream is Japan's most auspicious fish (the term 'tai' appears in the word medetai — auspicious), creating a confection that carries celebration meaning in its shape. Regional filling evolution: traditional custard cream (kasha-tari cream, similar to pastry cream); matcha anko; modern iterations include cheese, chocolate, Nutella, and savoury fillings (sausage, pizza). The batter composition is critical: a thin, lightly sweetened wheat-egg batter produces the characteristic taiyaki texture — not the thick pancake batter that produces a doughier inferior version.