Sakura Mochi Chocolate
Sakura Mochi Chocolate

Hello everybody, I hope you’re having an amazing day today. Today, I will show you a way to make a special dish, sakura mochi chocolate. One of my favorites food recipes. For mine, I’m gonna make it a bit tasty. This is gonna smell and look delicious.

Sakura Mochi Chocolate is one of the most well liked of recent trending meals in the world. It is enjoyed by millions daily. It is simple, it’s quick, it tastes yummy. They’re fine and they look fantastic. Sakura Mochi Chocolate is something which I’ve loved my whole life.

Experience cherry blossoms, or "sakura" in Japanese, with these seasonal sweets! You'll get to taste the cherry blossom-flavored mochi center in every bite. Mochi is a delicious traditional Japanese rice cake snack that has a sticky texture. I made this sakura crazy recipe of my own to recreate the "sakura mochi" chocolate made by the Tirol company in Japan.

To get started with this recipe, we must prepare a few components. You can cook sakura mochi chocolate using 10 ingredients and 15 steps. Here is how you cook it.

The ingredients needed to make Sakura Mochi Chocolate:
  1. Get 3 to 5 Salt-preserved sakura buds (for chocolate)
  2. Take 1 Salt-preserved sakura leaf (for gyuuhi)
  3. Make ready For gyuuhi (rice dough):
  4. Get 25 grams Shiratamako
  5. Get 15 grams White sugar
  6. Take 5 grams Trehalose
  7. Make ready 45 ml Water
  8. Prepare 1 for dusting Katakuriko
  9. Prepare For sakura chocolate:
  10. Get 60 grams White Chocolate

This is a limited edition so hurry before it's gone! Similar to: Eating mochi filled with red bean and sakura chocolate. This limited edition popular spring chocolate is back! Chewy mochi wrapped in sakura and red bean chocolate with a light salt accent for a true sakura mochi experience.

Instructions to make Sakura Mochi Chocolate:
  1. Soak the sakura buds and leaf in water for a while to remove some of the salt. Dry the sakura buds out in a microwave and rub them with your finger tips until they become powdery. Drain the leaf and chop finely after removing the stem.
  2. Place the shiratamako, white sugar, and trehalose in a heatproof bowl, and mix well with a whisk. Add the chopped sakura leaf and water, and combine.
  3. Loosely cover the heatproof bowl from Step 2 with plastic wrap, and microwave for a minute (at 700 W). Remove from the microwave, and mix with a spatula. Microwave for another 30 seconds, then mix again.
  4. Spread out the katakuriko in a tray and set the dough on top. Make the dough into a stick shape smaller than the mold diameter, and loosely cover the tray with plastic wrap.
  5. Place the finely chopped chocolate in a bowl, and warm up using a double boiler (a little under 60℃). Remove the melted chocolate from the double boiler. (The chocolate temperature should be about 45℃.)
  6. Place the sakura buds in the bowl from Step 5, and mix with a spatula. Let cool while stirring constantly, with the bottom of the bowl exposed to cold water (about 15℃). (The chocolate temperature should be about 25℃.)
  7. Warm up the chocolate again in a double boiler (about 35℃). (The chocolate temperature should be about 28 to 30℃.) Pour the chocolate into the molds about halfway up, and gently tap the molds a few times.
  8. *Store the remaining chocolate in a warm place and set aside. The bottom of the bowl should be barely touching the hot water underneath.
  9. Cut the stick from Step 4 with a pair of kitchen scissors (into appropriate thickness). Place the slices one by one into each mold from Step 7, and gently tap the molds again…
  10. Fill the molds with the remaining chocolate, covering the gyuuhi. Gently tap again… Store in a cold place to harden the chocolate.
  11. Chocolate shrinks slightly when hardened. Add more chocolate and let cool again if necessary.
  12. Scrape off excess chocolate from the molds with a spatula, and refrigerate for about 20 minutes. Take the chocolate out of the molds, and it's done.
  13. Place the chocolate on top of the sakura leaf, de-salted and dried. The aroma of the leaf should transfer a bit to the chocolates.
  14. "Kinako Mochi Chocolate" - - https://cookpad.com/us/recipes/170967-kinako-mochi-chocolate
  15. "Matcha Chocolate"

This limited edition popular spring chocolate is back! Chewy mochi wrapped in sakura and red bean chocolate with a light salt accent for a true sakura mochi experience. This new seasonal KitKat captures the spirit of sakura season with its take on the popular sakura mochi! The gentle and sweet red-bean flavor is wrapped in a delicious and elegant sakura infused chocolate with placed in eco friendly packaging! It's stinky, sticky, and reminds you of mucous.

So that is going to wrap it up with this special food sakura mochi chocolate recipe. Thank you very much for your time. I am sure you can make this at home. There is gonna be interesting food at home recipes coming up. Remember to bookmark this page on your browser, and share it to your family, friends and colleague. Thanks again for reading. Go on get cooking!