Karintō

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Karintō
TypeSnack food
Place of originJapan
Main ingredientsFlour, yeast, and brown sugar

Karintō (花林糖, karintō, (ateji)) is a traditional Japanese snack food. Sweet and deep-fried, it is made primarily of flour, yeast, and brown sugar. It has a deep brown and pitted appearance, and takes the form of a bite-sized pillow or short cylinder. Although traditional karintō is coated with brown sugar, recently other variations appear in the market, such as white sugar, sesame seeds, miso, or peanuts.

In popular culture[edit]

  • In Gosick, Kujo gives karintō to Victorique, who comments that they look like dog feces.
  • In Mirmo!, karinto is Yashichi’s favorite food.
  • In Magical Emi episode 34, karintō are featured as a snack a character spends the entire episode trying to conquer his fear of.

History[edit]

Karintō's roots are unclear, with primary origination theories being either from around the Nara Period or being derived from a Portuguese snack in a later period. In either case it has been available from street merchants since at least the Tenpō era, roughly from 1830 to 1841.