Kanpyo — Dried Gourd Ribbons
Tochigi Prefecture, Japan — kanpyo production tradition from Edo period
Kanpyo (干瓢, dried calabash/bottle gourd ribbons) is a uniquely Japanese preserved vegetable — long ribbons of calabash gourd (Lagenaria siceraria) that are peeled from the gourd in continuous strips, dried in the sun, and sold as pale cream-coloured ribbons that rehydrate and swell when soaked. Kanpyo is a specialist ingredient with limited use but non-substitutable character: the primary application is futomaki (fat sushi rolls, particularly for Setsubun/bean-throwing season and bento boxes) where kanpyo provides the sweet-soy flavoured ribbons that run through the roll alongside egg, spinach, and shiitake. It is also used in chicken miso soup (toriniku to kanpyo no miso shiru) and occasionally in nimono. Kanpyo is produced almost exclusively in Tochigi Prefecture (which supplies 98% of Japan's kanpyo) — particularly around Mibu and Utsunomiya. The production requires specific summer-evening atmospheric conditions.