Note: This glossary is constantly being built. If there is a term you'd like to see added or a question about a certain word, please leave a comment and I'll add the term or provide an explanation in the comments.
Also, please keep in mind that this is just a quick reference. Please click on the linked information for full explanations from other sources.
Also, please keep in mind that this is just a quick reference. Please click on the linked information for full explanations from other sources.
- adzuki: Red beans. This is the type of bean that is often used in Japanese sweets.
- anko (an): Red beans mixed with sugar to make a bean paste. This is often used to fill traditional Japanese sweets.
- anmitsu (あんみつ): a dessert made up of cubes of jelly made from seaweed combined with fruit, sweetened red beans and sweet black syrup.
- arare (あられ): hard, crunchy, pellet-like rice snacks which resemble hail
- bento: "lunch box"
- black sugar: Brown sugar or molasses sugar.
- "bo": Literally, this means "stick" but this word is used to describe foods sold in what we would call "bar" form.
- castella (カステラ): a type of Portuguese sponge cake which is very popular in Japan.
- cider (サイダー): a lemon lime drink
- dagashi: cheap snacks designed for children
- daifuku: a rice cake (mochi) filled with confections such as sweet red beans.
- dama (だま): lumps
- dango: "Dumplings" or balls made from rice flour which come in a variety of flavors. They are often served on a stick and covered in a sweet sauce.
- dashi: Japanese soup stock prepared in a variety of ways including with fish parts, soy sauce, kelp, and mushrooms.
- dekopon: A Japanese orange which is sweeter than conventional oranges. They can be identified by a small bump on the top.
- edamame: Baby soybeans served in their pods. These are often boiled, salted and served with alcoholic beverages.
- fuwa fuwa: "fluffy", (an onomatopoeia)
- goma: sesame seed
- hiragana: Japanese phonetic characters which are used to represent Japanese words.
- hyuga-natsu: a fragrant and somewhat sour citrus fruit from the Miyagi prefecture area of Japan
- imagawayaki (今川焼き): A Japanese pancake-like pastry which is shaped like a hockey puck and filled with red beans or other fillings. It is usually sweet, but there are also savory versions.
- iwashi/いわし: sardines
- kamaboko: processed white fish sold in small "loaves" or tubes (similar to cookie dough tubes in the U.S.)
- kanji: Chinese characters used in Japanese writing. These are not phonetic so you must be able to recognize the character's meaning to be able to pronounce it.
- karinto (花林糖): a flour, sugar and yeast-based fried snack (akin to deep fried doughnut batter). Typically, it is coated in brown sugar, but other flavors are sold.
- katakana: Japanese phonetic characters which are often used to represent foreign words. For example: "Cheese" in English is phonetically represented in Japanese as "Chii-zu" (チーズ).
- katsuoboshi: Fish shavings (from tuna) which are used to flavor various Japanese dishes.
- kinako: Toasted soy bean flour which resembles peanut butter in flavor
- kombu:Seaweed or kelp used in Japanese soup stock or dishes.
- kongari (こんがり): "browned", often used on products that looked toasted.
- koshian: Red bean paste passed through a sieve or strainer to remove the skins in preparation for using it in sweets or other dishes.
- kuchidoke (くちどけ): "melt in your mouth"; often used for creamy chocolate products
- manju: A general name for a variety of Japanese sweets which tend to include (but are not limited to) a shell made from rice, yam, or buckwheat flour and a filling from sweetened beans.
- matcha:Very fine powdered green tea used in tea ceremonies and used for flavoring and dying food.
- marron: Chestnuts
- mentaiko (明太子): Marinated pollock roe (fish eggs)
- mirin: Sweet rice wine used in cooking (not for drinking).
- miso: Fermented soy bean paste, often used in soups or as flavoring in various dishes.
- mitsu: thin, dark sweet syrup used with traditional Japanese sweets like warabimochi and anmitsu.
- mochi: Rice cake made by pounding rice until it is stretchy and can be formed into shapes.
- momo: peach
- monaka: sweets (beans, ice cream, chestnuts, etc.) sandwiched between two bland wafers
- mugi-choco: Chocolate-coated puffed wheat
- mugi-cha: Roasted barley tea
- natsumikan: "summer oranges" - a grapefruit like Japanese citrus fruit
- nori: edible seaweed
- onigiri: rice balls
- oshiruko: Sweet red bean soup with mochi.
- otsumami: Snacks to be eaten with alcoholic beverages. Usually, they are salty, but not always. Sometimes referred to as "sakana" or "skuukoo".
- pero pero (ペロペロ): "licking" (used with candies on sticks)
- saku saku: "crispy", (an onomatopoeia)
- sakura: cherry blossom (often used to describe cherry-flavored sweets)
- sarasara: indicates the sound of something moving smoothly like water or sand, or it can mean "squeaky clean", (an onomatopoeia)
- satsuma: a citrus fruit of Chinese origin, similar to a mandarin orange
- satsumaimo: Japanese sweet potato
- shittori (しっとり): moist, damp (often used to denote softness in crisp snacks)
- shoyu: Soy sauce
- soba boro (蕎麦ぼうろ): buckwheat cookies made with whole wheat flour, sugar, eggs, and buckwheat
- suppai: sour, or acidic
- taiyaki: a fish-shaped sweet made of pancake-like batter usually made with a filling of beans or custard
- takoyaki: octopus dumplings
- tare: thickened soy sauce, often mixed with other flavors, often used as an accompaniment to meat
- taro: a Japanese corm (plant stem)
- tonkatsu: breaded, fried pork cutlet.
- tonkotsu: pork bone
- torori (とろ~り): creamy, melting
- torukeru (とるける): melt, melty, or melting, often used to describe ganache- or fudge-like chocolate confections
- tsubu tsubu: "pebbly", (an onomatopoeia)
- umeboshi: Sour and salty pickled plums.
- wagashi: traditional Japanese sweets, often served with tea
- warabimochi (蕨餅): a jelly-like sweet made from braken starch, often served with kinako and mitsu (thin, dark, sweet syrup)
- wasabi: Japanese horseradish
- watagashi: cotton candy
- yakiimo: grilled sweet potato, often sold by street stalls or vendors
- yakiniku: grilled meat
- yakitori: grilled chicken on wooden skewers
- yatsuhashi: a triangular-shaped Japanese sweet made from rice flour and often filled with beans or other fillings; it is commonly sold in its uncooked form as a souvenir and is quite sweet and flavored with cinnamon
- yooshoku(洋食): a synthesis of European and Japanese cuisine developed during the 19th century during the Meiji restoration
- youkan: a jelly dessert usually made with bean paste, usually sold in blocks
- yuzu: A citrus fruit, the juice and rind of which are used to flavor various dishes. It tastes like a cross between a mandarin orange and a grapefruit.
- yuzukoshoo: a fermented seasoning made from yuzu, salt and chili which is often used in savory dishes
- zunda (ずんだ): mashed raw soy beans (edamame); it is often used in sweets, but also other types of regional cuisine (especially in the Tohoku region)