Dorayaki and Japanese Filled Pan Pancake Confectionery
Japan (nationwide; modern form established Meiji-Taisho era Tokyo)
Dorayaki consists of two soft, honey-sweetened castella-style pancakes sandwiching a generous filling of sweet anko (red bean paste) — one of the most beloved everyday wagashi in Japan and culturally immortalised as the favourite food of the manga character Doraemon. The pancake batter uses eggs, sugar, mirin, and honey for its characteristic amber colour and moist crumb, with baking powder as leavening; castella, the Portuguese-derived sponge technique, directly influences the texture. The anko filling is traditionally tsubuan (chunky) for classic dorayaki, though koshian (smooth) is equally common; premium versions use Hokkaido Dainagon azuki. Modern innovation has expanded fillings to matcha custard, chestnut cream, butter and anko, fresh strawberry and cream, and white bean paste (shiroan). The name derives from dora (gong) — the round pancakes supposedly resembling the instrument. Closely related forms include taiyaki (fish-shaped filled waffle iron cakes with anko, custard, or cheese), imagawayaki/kaiseki-yaki (thicker cylinder forms of the same concept), and monaka (wafer sandwich shells filled with anko). Pan-frying on a flat iron griddle at 160–170°C and covering briefly creates the characteristic domed rise without direct top heat.