mochi from fugetsu-do
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mochi from fugetsu-do
ice cream shops & bakeries 📍little tokyo,la
Super cute wagashi from Fugetsu-do after the tea festival (:
Top 5 Dessert Places in Los Angeles!!!
We’ve crunched all the numbers for you, and here’s the list – The top 5 places to go for dessert in Los Angeles! 1. Surprise Surprise Bake Shop - Studio City (Image Source: Surprise Surprise Bake Shop) LA’s premiere bakery for delicious Cake Pops! These bite size confections burst onto the scene a few years ago,…
Top 5 Dessert Places in Los Angeles!!! was originally published on Sugar Loco
shopping for mochi at the loveliest shoppe in all the land, where the Japanese desserts look like precious miniature wrapped gifts: FUGETSU-DO. Anything you ask, the lady behind the counter bows her head and says "oh, it's VERY good."
UPCOMING EVENT IN LOS ANGELES (NOV. 16)
excerpt:
The highly popular “Nihonmachi: The Place to Be,” a musical journey about California’s Japantowns, returns to Little Tokyo on Saturday, Nov. 16, at 2 p.m. at the Aratani Theatre in downtown Los Angeles.
The performance is a benefit for the Little Tokyo Public Safety Association (Little Tokyo Koban) that celebrates its 31st anniversary.
Fugetsu-Do Confectionery presents “Nihonmachi” to celebrate its 110th anniversary. The stage production is based on the history of Fugetsu-Do, one of the nation’s oldest Asian-owned businesses, which was opened in 1903 by the Kito family.
Owner Brian Kito stated, “If you live, work or play in Little Tokyo, you should come and enjoy a lesson in Little Tokyo history. I thought it would be a great way to pay tribute to my grandfather Seiichi and my father Roy to bring this production back to Little Tokyo and to share our story – one not soon to be forgotten. The story of a family-owned business for three generations faced with closing its doors.”
Produced by the Los Angeles-based Grateful Crane Ensemble, “Nihonmachi” is written by Sansei playwright Soji Kashiwagi (“The Camp Dance: The Music & The Memories”), directed by Darrell Kunitomi, with musical direction by Scott Nagatani.
This two-act show tells the fictional story of Alan Iwata, a Sansei manju maker who is faced with shutting down his family business after 99 years in Japantown. But just before he closes his doors, the spirit of his Issei grandfather returns and takes Alan on a journey back some 77 years to Nihonmachi the way it used to be.
“And along the way,” said Kashiwagi, “our Sansei character meets his feisty Issei grandmother, sees his family business through the Great Depression, the war years in camp, resettlement after camp, redevelopment in the ’50s and ’60s, the Asian American Movement of the ’70s and the redress movement in the ’80s.”
By learning his family history, Alan realizes the tremendous sacrifices and challenges his family overcame to keep the business alive, and in the end he decides it’s well worth the extra effort to work one more year so that he and the community can celebrate 100 years of making manju together.
“Our show tells a Nihonmachi story through the eyes of the Japanese American manju-ya family,” said Kashiwagi. “If you look at our three remaining Japantowns, the one business that has lasted 100 years or more is the manju-ya, so that’s why I decided to focus our story around this manju family.”
“Nihonmachi” features classic Japanese and American songs interspersed throughout the show, including “Oboro Zukiyo,” “Sumida-Gawa,” “Jinsei Gekijo,” “Mennai Chidori,” “Don’t Fence Me In,” “Night and Day,” and “Koko ni Sachi Ari,” to name a few. Also included is a medley of songs in tribute to the late Misora Hibari, the enormously popular Japanese singer and actress.
“All of the songs will trigger fond memories and will take our community back to a special time and place in their lives,” said Kashiwagi. “For the Nisei, the Japanese songs especially will bring back memories of their Issei parents.
“For the Sansei, these songs are also very emotional because they remember hearing their grandparent or parent singing them as they were growing up. And many of the songs, especially those by Misora Hibari, gave our community strength and hope and helped us get through some very difficult times throughout our history.”
[cont.]
Fugetsu-Do sweet shop, assorted sweets by jleighb on Flickr.