Wakasa Obama Juku Food Culture Museum — Regional Cuisine Heritage
The Obama Food Culture Museum (御食国若狭おばま食文化館) celebrates Obama's 1,500-year history as miketsukuni — an imperial food-supply province that provided seafood and salt to the ancient capitals of Nara and Kyoto. The museum's exhibits trace the Saba Kaido mackerel route, display traditional fishing methods, and explain wakasa-karei (flatfish) processing techniques that preserved seafood for the 72-kilometer journey to Kyoto.
The museum includes working demonstration kitchens where visitors observe traditional fish processing: mackerel salting, fish fermentation for heshiko, and wakasa-guji (tilefish) preparation. The highlight is the hands-on workshop area offering chopstick lacquering (¥1,200), fish-shaped kamaboko making (¥800), and heshiko pickling mini-courses (¥1,500) — all resulting in take-home products. The museum restaurant serves Obama's regional specialties: grilled mackerel sushi, heshiko rice bowl, and wakasa-guji miso soup.
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