Although Japan lacks ethnic diversity, it seems to more than make up for it in diversity of cuisine. Although the overarching recipes of Japanese foods can be found everywhere, you’d be surprised and how diverse the differences can be from region to region. Having your New Year’s soup in Okayama Prefecture may be quite different from Akita Prefecture’s offering. Even purchasing oden from a chain like 7-Eleven will produce different results if it’s from Osaka or Tokyo.
This is also true of another of Japan’s standard foods: rice balls also known as onigiri or musubi. To taste all the unique variations Japan has to offer, one must be a seasoned traveler, or they could just go to Momochi, a shop which offers a taste of all 47 prefectures straight from the counter. Our own Mr. Sato, eager to taste of these deliciously distinct snacks, visited Momochi to sample one of each.
The following are Momochi’s 47 Prefecture rice balls with a very brief description. Note that the word “pickle” is often used but the various methods of pickling and vegetables used in different parts of Japan is extremely vast so consider each one unique. We also have photos of Mr. Sato posing with each rice ball presented in slide shows for each of Japan’s major regions. If you’d like to get a better idea of what they’re like or if you can get enough of Mr. Sato’s face, please check them out.
▼ Hokkaido & Tohoku area prefectures
NOT PICTURED
Fukushima – Tara Kanroni
Cod stewed in soy sauce and sugar
▼ Kanto area prefectures
NOT PICTURED
Gunma – Shimonita Negi Miso
Green onions and miso (fermented soy paste)
▼ Chubu area prefectures
NOT PICTURED
Yamanashi – Ninjin Meshi
Carrots
▼ Kansai area prefectures
▼ Chugoku area prefectures
NOT PICTURED
Okayama – Sawara
Japanese Spanish mackerel
▼ Shikoku area prefectures
▼ Kyushu & Okinawa
■ Couldn’t catch’em all!
Although Mr. Sato set out for nationwide domination of rice balls, his visit to the Momochi had a few setbacks. The store was completely out of Yamanashi’s Ninjin Meshi flavor, and the racks for Gunma’s Shimonita Negi Miso and Fukushima’s Tara Kanroni were both empty at the time of his visit. He could just barely get Fukui’s Sauce Katsu and Okayama’s Sawara. This left his final tally at 44 of the 47 prefectural rice balls. Not a bad haul, but sadly not all of them.
■ Best in show: Salad Pan Omusubi
After happily tasting all of the rice balls, Mr. Sato struggled to determine the best three. In the end he declared Shiga Prefecture’s Salad Pan flavor to be the best. It’s based on a brand of snack bread with mayonnaise and thinly chopped pickled daikon. Although the bread was substituted with rice it still had an excellent blending of tastes and was a neat concept overall. In second place was Aomori’s Tsugarudzuke followed by the Sawara rice ball from Okayama Prefecture. Really though, everyone’s a winner. Well, everyone except…
■ You doing okay over in Ishikawa?
For those who actually read through the entire list, you might have noticed the rice ball of Ishikawa being a little odd. Named Dakidashi Omusubi (or “Soup Kitchen Rice Ball” in English), it is an equally depressing recipe of simply rice and salt. Despite being a bit of a downer, Mr. Sato still thought it was tasty. So, if you want to broaden your culinary horizons in a fast and easy way, Momochi is well worth checking out.
Shop Information
Momochi
Odakyu Hyakkaten Shinjuku B2F, 1-1-3 Nishi, Shijuku, Tokyo
Weekdays: 10:00am to 8:30pm
Sundays/Holidays: 10:00am to 8:00pm
Original report by Mr. Sato
Photos: RocketNews24
The full list
Hokkaido – Potato Butter
Aomori – Tsugarudzuke
Local brand of herring roe pickled in soy sauce
Iwate – Sabagohan
Mackerel and vegetables
Miyagi – Aburafu
Fried wheat gluten
Akita – Iburigakko
Smoked vegetables such as daikon or carrots
Yamagata – Dashi
Minced and seasoned vegetables (not to be confused with the widely used Japanese soup “dashi”)
Fukushima – Tara Kanroni
Cod stewed in soy sauce and sugar
Ibaraki – Natto Takuan
Fermented soy beans and pickles
Tochigi – Age Gyoza
Fried gyoza
Gunma – Shimonita Negi Miso
Green onions and miso (fermented soy paste)
Saitama – Katemeshi
Grains, vegetables, and seaweed
Chiba – Mezashi
Small fish dried and baked
Tokyo – Asari Tsukudani
Clams boiled in soy sauce
Kanagawa – Shirasu Gohan
Really small and young fish (aka whitebait)
Niigata – Kenkiyaki
Miso grilled with yuzu peels and green onion
Yamanashi – Ninjin Meshi
Carrots
Nagano – Shinshu Nozawa Nadzuke
Pickles from Nozawa, Nagano
Toyama – Tororo Konbu
Grated yam and kelp
Ishikawa – Dakidashi Omusubi
“Soup Kitchen Musubi” (rice and salt only)
Fukui – Sauce Katsu
Breaded meat cutlet and sauce
Gifu – Akakabudzuke
Pickled red turnip
Shizuoka – Sakuraebi Kakiage
Fried sakura shrimp
Aichi – Ebiten Musu
Shrimp tempura
Mie – Shiso Hijiki
Shiga – Salad Pan
Mayo and finely chopped pickled daikon
Kyoto – Shibadzuke
Pickled eggplant and shiso
Osaka – Aji Nori Konbu Iri
“Filled with seaweed and kelp taste!”
Hyogo – Ikanago no Kugini
Small fish boiled in soy sauce and sugar until they look like nails
Nara – Naradzuke
Nara style pickles
Wakayama – Kishu Nanko Ume
A regional type of plum
Tottori – Rakkyo
A type of green onion
Shimane – Wakame
Seaweed
Okayama – Sawara
Japanese Spanish mackerel
Hiroshima – Hiroshimana
A leafy green vegetable
Yamaguchi – Kinako
Roasted and powdered soy beans
Tokushima – Fish Katsu Ten
Fish fillet tempura
Kagawa – Iwanori Wasabi
Seaweed and wasabi
Ehime – Jakoten
Fried fish paste
Kochi – Kastuo Shoyudzuke
Dried bonito picked in soy sauce
Fukuoka – Mentaiko
Seasoned cod roe
Saga – Renkon
Lotus root
Nagasaki – Kakuni
Simmered pork
Kumamoto – Takana Itame
Fried mustard leaves
Oita – Tori Karaage
Fried chicken
Miyazaki – Toukibi
Corn
Kagoshima – Niwatori Gobo
Chicken and burdock root
Okinawa – Andansu
Miso fried in pork fat
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