Saturday, January 2, 2021

Mochitsuki

 My friend kindly invited me to join her family on New Year's Eve morning for mochitsuki, the pounding of rice to make mochi. This is a Japanese tradition around the new year. 


First the rice was cooked.


Then it was put into the large wooden mortar, called usu.



The rice is alternately pounded with a wooden mallet, called kine, and turned. Experts can do this very fast with no one getting hurt.  Since my friend and I are not experts and we didn't want to hit her father, we paused for the turning.




When it was pounded enough, my friend and her mother removed the stitcky pounded rice from the usu and brought it to the kitchen.




After it "rested" a bit, we ate some with sweet red beans.



They send me home with a big chunk.  (I've eated it with spicy salsa, and with apples and cinnamon.) I am very thankful to have been able to take part in this Japanese tradition.  Thank you, Yumi!

7 comments:

Vireya said...

What a fun way to start the year! I love mochi cakes, but had never thought about what went in to making them.

Happy 2021!

kiwikid said...

Lovely your friend included you in that interesting tradition.

Jen L said...

Fun and delicious! Happy new year!

roughterrain crane said...

Happy New Year with "mochi"!

diamondc said...

Pamela: How wonderful of a tradition, it looks yummy to me, thank-you for showing how it is done.
I too would add something like salsa, we like spicy here in the Laurent house.
Happy New Year

Catherine

Jeanie said...

What a wonderful experience. Was it tasty?!

Leonore Winterer said...

What a fun way to start the new year!