Kiritanpo — Pounded Rice Hot Pot & Grilled Sticks
Kiritanpo (きりたんぽ) is Akita's signature comfort food, originating from the mountainous Kazuno region where woodcutters and hunters needed portable, filling meals. The preparation involves pounding freshly cooked rice until semi-mashed, wrapping it around cedar skewers, and grilling over charcoal until the surface crisps and develops a toasted rice aroma. The result resembles a cylindrical rice cake, about 20cm long, with a crispy exterior and chewy interior.
Kiritanpo is eaten two ways: grilled with miso or sweet soy glaze as a snack, or sliced into chunks for kiritanpo nabe (鍋, hot pot). The nabe version simmers kiritanpo pieces in a rich chicken broth with Hinai-jidori chicken (比内地鶏, Akita's premium local chicken breed), burdock root, scallions, maitake mushrooms, and seri (Japanese parsley). The rice absorbs the savory broth, softening into a texture between mochi and dumplings. It's deeply satisfying on cold Akita nights, embodying the prefecture's agricultural and foraging heritage.
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