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hello visitors, the name is Madori:] as if you didn't already know that n_n So i had to make this blog, and im not quite sure how to use it yet :D well anyways hope you have fun on here .-.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Ichigo Daifuku- Japan:)

What you need:
    1.5 cups mochiko (rice flour) 1.5 cups water 1/4 cup sugar 2 cups of anko (sweet red bean paste) About a dozen small to medium strawberries Wax paper or a cutting board katakuriko (potato starch) for the cutting board
Mix the flour, water, and sugar in a pot. When it's good and mixed, put the heat on as if you were trying to bring it to a boil. Cover. After a few minutes it will thicken alarmingly at the bottom. Stir it up, and keep stirring every minute or so until you have what looks like a pot full of white chewing gum. Take the pot off the heat and leave uncovered.
Flour your working surface with the potato starch, or if you don't have that more rice flour, because this stuff is *sticky.* Using a wooden spoon or whatever, pull out globs of goo, about as much as you want to use for each daifuku (golf ball size is a good point to aim for, though it'll be difficult to judge because of how stretchy it is) and set them on the potato starch. This will help them cool faster. Otherwise you'll be waiting forever.  The pot will keep a layer of the gluey stuff no matter how hard you scrape. Don't worry about that, just set it aside to cool.
Wash the strawberries and cut the leaves off. Smear anko all over them. (The recipes I've seen show them rolled up in neat little anko balls. Hah! If anyone knows how to do this trick, tell me!) It doesn't have to look pretty, as this will all be covered up.
When the dough is cool enough that you can work it without burning yourself, flour your fingers, then work the dough balls into rounds. It's stretchy stuff, so this is easy. When you've got a good round place an anko-covered strawberry on it, then draw the dough up over the filling and pinch it together so it sticks. Pinch it all off and you have an ichigo daifuku! Resist the urge to eat it right there and make the rest.
Caution: don't stretch the dough too thin. If you do, the thing won't have much structural integrity and can tear.
Oh - remember the layer of crud in the pot? When it's cool you can just peel it out and eat it, maybe even make another daifuku with it, although the texture will be a little weird. If there's some papery stuff hardened on the sides, peel it off and eat it. It's tasty.

recipe from: http://www.c4vct.com/kym/bento/ichigod.htm

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