Dango

Related to mochi, dango (Japanese: 団子) is a Japanese dumpling made from mochiko (rice flour). It is sticky and filling. It is often served with green tea. Dango is eaten year-round, but its different varieties are traditionally eaten in given seasons. Three to four Dango are often served on a skewer. One variety of dango from Hokkaido is made from potato flour and baked with shoyu (soy sauce). In 1999, dango experienced a surge of popularity in Japan: a song entitled "Dango-san-kyoudai" (three dango brothers) was released and a craze for eating dango developed at that time. (In a play on words, the song is a tango.) Dango is used internationally amongst go players as a deprecatory term for an inefficient, dumpling-like cluster of stones in a go game. It is also the name of an interesting go variant invented in 1991.

Different Types

There are many different varieties of dango which are usually named after the various seasonings served on or with it.
  • An: Very sweet bean paste. An-Dango is the most popular flavor in Japan.
  • Mitarashi: A syrup made from shoyu (soy sauce) and sugar. Popular with children.
  • Kinako: A toasted soy flour. Recently kinako has been identified as a healthy food.
  • Goma: sesame seeds. Also considered to be a "healthy" food. It is both sweet and salty.
  • Chichi-Dango
  • Nori: dried and seasoned seaweed

See Also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
toothpaste
nervous breakdown
japanese tea ceremony
ballet lesson
shibuya, tokyo
erotic art in pompeii (low quality)
jimmy doolittle
herennius etruscus
hostilian
project vanguard
dez cadena
moors murders
osci
keith morris
pillar of eliseg
chuck dukowski
kira roessler
ras an uachtarin
dos (disambiguation)
c'el revuelta
brian migdol
robo
japanese sports
music of japan
nhk
japanese television programs
tanabata
tourism in japan
football world cup 1994
japanese baseball
shichigosan
onigiri
international broadcasting in japan
saburo kitajima
hiyayakko
touch
tempura
osechi
okonomiyaki
japanese new year
mochi
boys over flowers
takehiko inoue
soba