Japanese Anmitsu and Mitsumame: Traditional Dessert Culture and the Red Bean Sweetness Tradition
Japan — Tokyo Meiji-era kissaten (café) culture
Anmitsu and mitsumame are two related traditional Japanese cold dessert preparations that originated in Tokyo's Meiji and Taisho-era kissaten (tea houses and cafés) — transparent agar jelly (kanten), sweet red bean paste (anko), various seasonal fruits, and a drizzle of molasses (kuromitsu) or brown sugar syrup assembled in a glass bowl or lacquer box. Mitsumame is the simpler base form: agar jelly cubes, boiled dried peas (representing the mame of the name), fruit pieces, and kuromitsu. Anmitsu adds anko (sweet red bean paste) to this base, plus sometimes a small mochi or ice cream. The agar jelly is the technical centrepiece: made from kanten (agar derived from tengusa seaweed), which sets firmer than Western gelatin and produces a clean-cutting, slightly grainy cube that releases cleanly from the spoon. Kanten differs from gelatin in that it sets at room temperature (without refrigeration), holds its shape at room temperature in Japanese summer heat, and has a slightly different texture — firmer, more brittle, with a specific 'spring-snap' when cut. The assembly of anmitsu follows a specific visual grammar: white agar cubes as the base layer; green mochi or boiled peas providing colour contrast; fruit (red cherry, orange mandarin, green kiwi) providing seasonal variety; brown kuromitsu drizzled over at service by the diner. The kuromitsu (literally 'black honey' — a syrup made from Okinawan black sugar) is the primary sweetener: the diner pours it over the assembly at the table, integrating sweet with the clean agar and anko. Traditional anmitsu shops (anmitsuya) in Tokyo's Shibuya, Asakusa, and Yanaka districts maintain preparations unchanged for decades.