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Japan — nationwide, ancient origins, regional variations
Japanese Dango: Skewered Rice Flour Dumplings and Seasonal Variations
Japan — nationwide, ancient origins, regional variations
Dango (団子) are round, skewered rice flour dumplings — simpler and more rustic in character than the refined wagashi forms, but equally important in Japan's confectionery culture as everyday festival foods and seasonal markers. The dough is made from either joshinko (non-glutinous rice flour), shiratamako (glutinous rice starch), or a blend of both — the ratio determines the final texture: more joshinko produces firmer, slightly crumblier dango; more shiratamako produces a more yielding, sticky, mochi-like texture. The standard is 3–5 dango per skewer. Key varieties: mitarashi dango (みたらし団子) — plain white dango glazed with a sweet-savoury soy-starch sauce (tare made from soy, mirin, sugar, and katakuriko starch); hanami dango (花見団子) — three dango per skewer in three colours (pink/sakura, white, green/yomogi) for flower-viewing; yomogi dango — green dango incorporating mugwort (yomogi) for its herbal, slightly bitter character; tsukimi dango — plain white dango in a pyramid formation for moon-viewing (no skewer); and an dango — dango served coated in anko. The texture standard for all dango is uniformly smooth, without cracks, slightly yielding when bitten, with no raw flour taste. Uniformity of ball size on the skewer is an indicator of craftsmanship.
Wagashi and Confectionery