Provenance Technique Library

Okinawa Prefecture — kokuto sugar production since at least 17th century cane cultivation Techniques

1 technique from Okinawa Prefecture — kokuto sugar production since at least 17th century cane cultivation cuisine

Clear filters
1 result
Okinawa Prefecture — kokuto sugar production since at least 17th century cane cultivation
Kuromitsu Black Sugar Syrup Japanese Applications
Okinawa Prefecture — kokuto sugar production since at least 17th century cane cultivation
Kuromitsu (黒蜜, black honey/molasses) is Japan's dark sugar syrup made from kokuto (Okinawan black sugar) — cane sugar minimally processed, retaining molasses, minerals, and complex caramel-like flavor. Used extensively in Japanese sweets: poured over warabi mochi, kuzu mochi, anmitsu, kakigori (shaved ice), and tofu as a dessert condiment. Kokuto (the solid black sugar itself) is used as a sweetener in traditional Okinawan cooking, sake production, and health tonics. The flavor is distinct from refined sugar — deep, complex, slightly bitter molasses character closer to good treacle than Western simple syrup.
Confectionery