Yamagata Imoni River Festival Taro Stew
Yamagata Prefecture, Tohoku, Japan — Mamigasaki River festival tradition
Imoni is Yamagata Prefecture's beloved autumn tradition: a communal outdoor taro root stew cooked in enormous iron pots beside the Mamigasaki River during the annual Imo-ni Kai festivals held every September. The dish crystallises the Japanese cultural concept of satoyama food — ingredients harvested from the mountain foothills brought to the riverbank for communal preparation. Yamagata-style imoni is a soy-and-sake-based beef stew (as opposed to Miyagi Prefecture's miso-based pork variant), centred on satoimo (taro root) with thinly sliced wagyu or local beef, konnyaku, and green onion. The taro is the hero: its slippery, starchy texture and faint earthy sweetness absorb the soy-flavoured broth. At the official festival the stew is made in a six-metre iron pot using an industrial crane — but the home version is prepared in a large donabe clay pot or Dutch oven over a wood fire or gas burner. The ritual of imoni-kai (imoni gathering) is deeply social: groups of friends and colleagues gather outdoors from early September when the first satoimo harvest coincides with cool mountain air. A unique local tradition dictates that after finishing the stew, curry roux and udon noodles are added to the remaining broth, transforming it into imoni-curry-udon for the second round.