Japanese Sakura Season Hanami Food Culture and Cherry Blossom Eating Tradition
Japan (national spring tradition, Heian period origin)
Hanami (花見 — flower viewing) is Japan's most democratic culinary tradition: the ritual gathering beneath flowering cherry trees to eat, drink, and celebrate the transient beauty of spring. The tradition dates to the Nara period (710–794 CE) when plum blossoms (ume) were originally favoured, shifting to sakura during the Heian period. The modern picnic-style hanami became a national practice during the Edo period. The food culture is deliberately accessible and communal: bento boxes, onigiri, taiyaki, dango (particularly hanami dango — the three-coloured pink-white-green skewer of sweet rice dumplings), sakura mochi (sweet rice cake wrapped in pickled cherry leaf), and heated sake or canned beer. The sakura colour palette (pale pink) dominates spring food aesthetics: sakura flavour is distinctively mild and floral from the pickled leaves, used in sakura tea, sakura chocolate, sakura-flavoured Kit Kats, and seasonal wagashi. Sakura shrimp (sakura ebi) from Suruga Bay share the colour association but not flavour — their season (spring/autumn trawling) aligns with hanami timing creating a convenient marketing pairing.