Senbei Rice Crackers Japanese Varieties
Japan — rice cracker tradition since Nara period; modern senbei culture Edo period
Senbei (煎餅, rice crackers) are Japan's most iconic snack — thin or thick discs of rice flour or glutinous rice, baked or fried and seasoned. Japanese senbei culture is highly differentiated: Kanto-style senbei are thicker, crunchier, and seasoned with soy sauce; Kyoto-style (okaki) use glutinous rice and are more delicate. Varieties include: shōyu senbei (soy-glazed), nori-wrapped senbei, shrimp senbei (ebi senbei), and zarame sugar-glazed. Premium senbei shops hand-grill each cracker over charcoal, brushing with soy at intervals. The Saitama region (particularly Misato and Kasukabe) is Japan's senbei capital for soy-style crackers.