Types of Wagashi — The Complete Guide to Japanese Sweets (With Tea Pairings)
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Wagashi are traditional Japanese confections crafted to express seasonality, balance sweetness, and complement tea. This guide explains the core categories, famous styles, storage tips, tea pairings, and how to choose gifts with confidence.

What Is Wagashi?
- Definition: Bean-, grain-, and plant-based sweets developed alongside Japan’s tea culture.
- Common bases: Azuki/white bean paste (anko), rice flours (mochi, dango), wheat flour, sugar, agar-agar (kanten).
- Purpose: Designed to harmonize with tea—especially matcha, sencha, hojicha, and gyokuro.
Three Core Categories (by Moisture)
1) Namagashi — Fresh Sweets
- Shelf life: Best the day of purchase to ~2–3 days.
- Texture: Soft and delicate; often hand-shaped seasonal motifs.
- Examples: Nerikiri, daifuku, warabi mochi, kuzu mochi, jellied fruits.
- Tea pairing: Usucha (light matcha), gyokuro, high-grade sencha.
- Storage: Cool, dry place; refrigerate only if instructed (cold can harden starch).
2) Han-Namagashi — Semi-Moist
- Shelf life: ~5–14 days (product-dependent).
- Examples: Manju, dorayaki, taiyaki (baked), some jelly-type sweets.
- Tea pairing: Sencha, hojicha, mid-grade matcha.
- Storage: Room temperature away from heat/humidity; reseal quickly.
3) Higashi — Dry Sweets
- Shelf life: Longest (weeks to months).
- Examples: Yokan (agar jelly blocks), rakugan (pressed sugar), konpeito, senbei, karinto.
- Tea pairing: Koicha/usucha (matcha), hojicha, bancha—great for gifting/shipping.
- Storage: Airtight to prevent moisture pickup.
Popular Wagashi Styles (A–Z Quick Guide)

Yokan (羊羹)
Dense agar-based jelly with azuki or white bean. Smooth, glossy slices; travels well.
Pairs with: Matcha (usucha), hojicha. Shelf life: Weeks unopened.
Monaka (最中)
Crisp mochi wafers sandwiching bean paste; sometimes chestnut or mochi inside.
Pairs with: Sencha, hojicha. Note: Keep dry to preserve crispness.
Daifuku (大福)
Soft mochi wrapped around anko or fruit.
Pairs with: Gyokuro, high-grade sencha. Shelf life: Same day to 1–2 days.
Manju (饅頭)
Steamed/baked buns with anko in a wheat-based casing.
Pairs with: Sencha, hojicha. Allergens: Wheat; sometimes eggs/dairy.
Dorayaki (どら焼き)
Castella-like pancakes filled with anko.
Pairs with: Hojicha, sencha. Shelf life: ~3–7 days.
Dango (団子)
Skewered rice dumplings with mitarashi sauce, anko, or kinako.
Pairs with: Hojicha, bancha. Shelf life: Best same day.
Warabi Mochi (蕨餅)
Silky cubes made from warabi starch or blends, often dusted with kinako; served chilled.
Pairs with: Sencha, usucha. Shelf life: Same day.
Kuzu Mochi (葛餅)
Kudzu starch jelly with refreshing bounce, often with kuromitsu + kinako.
Pairs with: Sencha. Shelf life: Short; keep cool.
Rakugan (落雁)
Pressed fine sugar/flour sweets for tea ceremony.
Pairs with: Koicha/usucha. Shelf life: Long if airtight.
Konpeito (金平糖)
Faceted sugar candy; decorative and festive.
Pairs with: Hojicha, bancha. Shelf life: Very long.
Senbei (煎餅) / Karinto (かりんとう)
Crisp rice crackers / deep-fried brown-sugar sticks.
Pairs with: Hojicha, genmaicha. Allergens: Wheat/soy possible.
Seasonality & Aesthetics (Shun)
Wagashi mirror Japan’s seasons through color and form—sakura in spring, translucent cooling textures in summer, chestnut and sweet-potato themes in autumn, and refined ceremonial styles in winter.
Tea Pairing Basics — Quick Matrix
| Wagashi style | Sweetness | Texture | Best with tea |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yokan | Medium–high | Firm jelly | Matcha, hojicha |
| Monaka | Medium | Crisp + paste | Sencha, hojicha |
| Daifuku | Medium | Soft mochi | Gyokuro, sencha |
| Manju/Dorayaki | Medium | Cake/bun | Hojicha, sencha |
| Warabi/Kuzu mochi | Low–medium | Silky jelly | Sencha, usucha |
| Rakugan/Konpeito | High | Dry, brittle | Koicha/usucha |
| Senbei/Karinto | Sweet/savory | Crunchy | Hojicha, genmaicha |
Storage at Home (Do/Don’t)
- Do: Keep away from heat, humidity, and strong odors; re-seal immediately after opening.
- Refrigeration: Only when the label says so (refrigeration can harden starch).
- Freezing: Works for some mochi buns/cakes; avoid for crisp items like monaka shells.
- Label check: Watch for wheat, soy, sesame, nuts, dairy, gelatin if gifting.
Choosing for Gifts (No-Mistake Checklist)
- Shipping: Prefer long-life items (yokan, higashi) for international gifts.
- Dietary needs: Ask about allergens; consider vegan-friendly options (agar jellies, bean-only fillings).
- Pairing card: Include a simple tea-pairing note for the recipient.
- Presentation: Seasonal motifs or regional specialties add story value.
FAQs
Are wagashi vegan?
Many are plant-based (beans, sugar, agar), but some include dairy, eggs, or gelatin. Always check labels.
Can I refrigerate mochi?
Only if indicated. Cold can dry and harden starch; consume fresh when possible.
Which wagashi travel best?
Yokan and dry sweets (rakugan, konpeito), plus well-sealed manju/dorayaki, travel better than fresh mochi.
What’s a good beginner mix?
One jelly (yokan) + one cake (dorayaki/manju) + one crisp (monaka/senbei) with matcha or hojicha.
Do I have to pair with matcha?
No—sencha balances sweetness, hojicha adds roasted notes, gyokuro feels luxe, and genmaicha suits snack-like items.