Yokan Mizu Yokan Japanese Wagashi Jelly Culture
Kyoto wagashi tradition, Muromachi period origins, refined through Edo period
Yokan is the quintessential Japanese wagashi jelly confection — dense, smooth, and deeply flavored with anko (azuki bean paste), agar-set into firm rectangular blocks that stand as one of the most contemplated and engineered sweets in Japanese patisserie tradition. The confection divides into neri yokan (firm, high-anko concentration, long shelf life) and mizu yokan (water yokan — softer, higher moisture, served chilled in summer as counterintuitively cooling luxury). Both forms depend on kanten (agar-agar derived from tengusa seaweed) rather than gelatin for setting, producing a distinctly clean, brittle texture that melts on the tongue without animal protein warmth. Master yokan craftsmen calibrate sugar content, agar concentration, and anko ratio to achieve specific texture ranges: neri yokan should slice cleanly with a thread or knife without crumbling, while mizu yokan should tremble slightly when unmolded. Seasonal variations include matcha yokan, chestnut yokan, sweet potato yokan, and yuzu yokan — each requiring ingredient-specific adjustments to agar and sugar ratios for proper set. The confection pairs essentially with matcha tea.