Small Sakura Mochi
- 5 blossoms Salt-preserved sakura blossoms
- 40 grams + 40 grams Shiratamako
- 20 grams Joshinko
- 16 grams Sugar
- 4 grams Trehalose
- 95 ml Water
- 1 tiny bit Red food coloring
- 120 to 150 grams An of your choice
- 1 for finishing Preserved sakura blossom leaves or salted sakura blossom
- 1 Mochiko flour or katakuriko
- Rinse the preserved sakura leaves and blossoms and soak in clean water to remove the saltiness.
- Drain the blossoms well which you are going to add to the mochi dough.
- Separate the flowers from the stems.
- Shape the anko into small balls.
- To make regular-sized ones, take 20 to 25 g of anko for each, and take 8 g for small-sized ones.
- The sakura mochi pictured on top has homemade sakura-an.You could also use the store-bought variety.
- After removing the saltiness from the sakura leaves, chop finely and add to the anko.
- You can enjoy the nice sakura flavour in the adzuki bean paste easily in this way.
- Put the shiratamako, joshinko, sugar and trehalose in a bowl.
- Add the food colouring dissolved in water.
- Mix well with chopsticks.
- Cover the bowl with cling film loosely and microwave for 1 and half minutes.
- Remove the bowl from the microwave and mix well with a heat-proof plastic spatula.
- Microwave for another 30 seconds and mix again.
- Microwave for another 30 seconds and mix again.
- If necessary, microwave for another 30 seconds...until the mixture is elastic and shiny.
- It will form a dough.
- Put the mochi dough onto a work surface dusted with mochitoriko flour.
- Divide the dough into 5 portions and then divide each into 3 portions.
- Dust your fingers and shape the portioned dough into a flat round with your fingers (make the centre thicker).
- Wrap the adzuki bean paste with a piece of dough and it is done.
- Make them pretty.
- This is one of 15 sakura mochi.
- They're so small.
- Try your best not to eat them all before serving them to other people.
- This is a regular sized one (a 1/5 portion).
- I added chopped sakura leaves to the aduki bean paste.
- Here are 'Sakura Strawberry Daifuku'.
- These are particularly popular with girls.
- Look how pretty they are!
salt, sugar, trehalose, water, red food coloring, your choice, blossom, flour
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/149665-small-sakura-mochi (may not work)