Go on a gourmet trip to the Aizu area, where you can enjoy everything from traditional dishes, sweets to sake

Aizu, one of Japan’s prominent sightseeing spots, is an area where you can thoroughly enjoy traditional Japanese food, sake, and the latest sweets. Here are some recommended spots around Aizu to check out.

Check out our writers’ top Japan travel ideas!

This post may contain affiliate links. If you buy through them, we may earn a commission at no additional cost to you.

 

First of all, what kind of place is the Aizu area?

The Aizu area is located in the south inland of Tohoku region, and is a famous sightseeing spot that is known for where many historical events occurred during the samurai era.

Because of that, there is still a lot of historical architecture in Aizu area and it is well-known as a samurai town.

ja.wikipedia.org

Tsuruga-jo Castle was the setting for wartime destruction during the Meiji Restoration.

tif.ne.jp

Nanukamachidoori (Nanukamachi Street). In the past, restaurants, inns, wholesale stores, and shops prospered along the street. There are still many stores that are over 100 years old.

Aizu area has many historical spots like this, but Aizu’s characteristic food culture has also developed and as they made the best use of tradition they also created new trends.

Here are five things you definitely can’t miss when you visit Aizu:

  1.  Enjoy sake
  2.  Enjoy traditional Japanese food
  3.  Enjoy local cuisine
  4.  Enjoy folk house cafes
  5.  Enjoy Japanese sweets and modern desserts

1. Enjoy sake

One of the things that visitors to Japan enjoy is sake.

All throughout Japan, there are sake storehouses that have been handed down through generations from ancient times, as well as choice sake that make the use of the natural resources of the area it’s made in.

In Aizu area there are an especially large number of sake storehouses and plenty of sake brands are made there, so it’s become a standard product for souvenirs.

Here are three recommended areas in Aizu where you can go to learn about how sake is made as well as have tastings and thoroughly enjoy yourself.

Aizu Miyaizumi Shuzou

外観2

miyaizumi.co.jp

Here you can become proficient in the history of Aizu sake, sample drink, purchase bottles, and even create original labels. If you want to learn everything about sake, here is a place you should definitely go.

Aizu Miyaizumi Shuzo Official Site (Japanese Only)

Kaeigura of Suehiro Shuzou

aizukanko.com

Established in 1850, it has been creating local sake for over 160 years. Part of the storehouse is used as a café.

Suehiro Shuzou Official Site (Japanese Only)

Eisen Shuzou, Yukkura

unnamed

eisen.jp

The Eisen Bandaigura is surrounded by woods, and beside it, they used the old warehouse as is as the Yukkura, a space full of memories. You can enjoy sake tasting and shopping at Yukkura while taking a walk in the surrounding scenery and enjoying the rural landscape.

Eisen Shuzou Yukkura Official Site (Japanese Only)

2. Enjoy traditional Japanese food

“Washoku,” or traditional Japanese food, has been accepted as a UNESCO important intangible cultural artifact. You can enjoy washoku’s true essence in the Aizu area.

Japanese tourists also enjoy traditional restaurants such as those featuring Japanese gardens and other features. Here are 3 restaurants in the Aizu area that you should drop by.

Kappou Mangerou


mangerou.com

Mangerou is a traditional Japanese restaurant that has been in business for 80 years. In this building where you can see traditional Japanese techniques everywhere, you can gaze out at a 1980 square meter Japanese garden as you enjoy your meal.

Mangerou Official Site (Japanese Only)

Kappou Suirin

suirin

aizu-cci.or.jp

This Japanese restaurant has been in business for 90 years. This well-established shop offers tradition and technique in their blowfish, soft-shelled turtle, and eel dishes.

Kappou Suirin Official Site (Japanese Only)

Unagi no Ebiya

genkan_noren sumibi

ebiya.org

This restaurant was established in 1902 and is currently on its fourth generation. It’s known in the area as a well-established shop, and you can see how the building is also over 100 years old, giving it an extremely traditional appearance.

Unagi no Ebiya Official Site (Japanese Only)

3. Enjoy local cuisine

The local cuisine from the Aizu area is well-known to be abundant and often in Tokyo department stores Tohoku Food Fairs are held and are quite popular. Here are five of the Aizu area’s representative local cuisines. 

Wappameshi

tif.ne.jp

This is a dish where rice and the side dishes are placed into a round wooden container called a “magewappa” and steamed. It’s said that in the past, the men who worked in the mountains would use magewappa as a bento box.

Takino Official Site (Japanese Only)

Dengakuyaki

 

mitsutaya.jp

Dengakuyaki is tofu pierced with bamboo sticks, flavored with miso, then roasted over a fire.

Aizu miso dengaku uses miso sauce that is made with red miso that has been seasoned with sugar and other spices. Items like mochi, deep-fried tofu, vegetables, dried fish, and other dishes are skewered, dipped in the sauce, and then grilled over a charcoal fire in a hearth.

Mitsutaya Official Site (Japanese Only)

Nishin no Sanshouzuke

fukushima-sf.com

Dried, sliced Pacific herring and Japanese pepper leaves are overlapped, seasoned with soy sauce and vinegar as well ingredients to draw out flavor such as sugar and sake, then pickled for 2-3 weeks.

Boutarani

keisyoumai.com

Boutara is a preserved food that has been made since ancient times where Pacific cod is dried in the shade like a rod. Then it’s soaked in water and boiled in soy sauce and sugar to become the salty-sweet “boutarani.”

Kozuyu

tif.ne.jp

Stewed dishes made of dried seafood are obtainable even in the inland Aizu area. From the latter period of the Edo period to the beginning of the Meiji period, kodzuyu spread throughout the Aizu domain as the food of samurai families and common people’s feasts, and even today it’s local cuisine that is without fail made for important ceremonial occasions and New Year’s.

4. Enjoy folk house cafes

In the Aizu area, there are still a great number of old warehouses and folk homes, and some of them have gained a new life by being transformed into cafes. These cafes are Western-style homes made of stone or remodeled warehouses that each have their own extremely individual style where you can taste a nostalgic moment in time.

Here are three of the most well-known folk house cafes.

Aizu Ichibankan

uyou.gr.jp

uyou.gr.jp

This warehouse and Western-style home was built in Meiji 17 (1884).

The world-famous bacteriologist pictured on the Japanese 1000 yen note, Hideo Noguchi, received surgery on his hand there as a child when it was a clinic. The first floor is currently a café, and the second floor is a Hideo Noguchi museum.

Aizu Ichibankan Official Site (Japanese Only)

Sanban Yamashita

sanban-yamashita.biz 

This folk house was remodeled with a layout that organized it like an old Japanese school. The menu is European-style, and has an abundant of dishes like pizza and pastas using uncured ham.

Sanban Yamashita Official Site (Japanese Only)

Antique Café Naka no Kura


pref.fukushima.lg.jp

This café, which offers Japanese sweets, was created in the style of a Kyoto warehouse. The building itself was a warehouse that was built 250 years ago and was remodeled. The china they used is original lacquer ware made in the Aizu area. They also exhibit valuable items that the daimyo (warring lord) used in the Edo period.

Antique Cafe Nakanokura (Japanese Only) 

5. Enjoy wagashi sweets and modern desserts

In the Aizu area, there is a line-up of traditional wagashi sweets as well as the latest desserts. Here are the highest quality wagashi and desserts among those sold in Aizu that you should definitely buy as souvenirs and gifts.

Kasutean – Aizu Aoi

会津葵1M

aizuaoi.com

Aizu Aoi’s kasutean uses techniques that were introduced from abroad through castella cakes, and mixes it with traditional Aizu wagashi techniques. Rare for wagashi, in 1962 the creative originality used in coming up with kasutean was recognized, and it earned the public recognition of the Director General of Science and Technology Agency.

Aizu Aoi Official Site

Yokan –Matsumoto-ya

yokan.jp

Matsumoto-ya was established in 1819, and it is famous for its yokan (sweet bean jelly), both its mizu-yokan and the Yu no Hana yokan in the photograph. The Yu no Hana yokan is especially easy to eat due to its cylindrical shape, and due to it being thick and heavy it’s a type of yokan that leaves an impression.

Matsumotoya Official Site (Japanese Only)

Tsubakimochi – Iseya Seika

aizukanko.com

Tsubakimochi uses both rice flour and wheat flour and is made using techniques that have been passed on since time immemorial. It has an excellent reputation and it’s one of Aizu’s souvenirs that can’t be missed.

Iseya Seika (Japanese Only)

Tomoe Monaka – Yoshida Kashiho

P1360109-bc2e7

yuki-ssg.seesaa.net

This snack is bite-sized and uses superior red bean paste that has been made excellently. This is another souvenir that shouldn’t be overlooked.

Aizu Dagashi – Honke Nagatoya

nagatoya.net

This photograph is of bird toffee, originating from the Aizu dagashi (“cheap sweets”) Honke Nagatoya store. This layout of this store mixes nostalgic cheap sweets and new pastries to create a huge offering of wagashi.

Nagatoya Official Site (Japanese Only)

Apple-kuchen – Tarou-an

taroan.co.jp 

The popular shop Tarou-an offers desserts using ingredients that are found around the Aizu area. The bouche filled with cream cheese called “Aizu’s Tenjin-sama” is popular. The dessert in the photo, the Fuji apple surrounding by baumkuchen called the “Apple-kuchen” is baked in the baum workshop within the store.

Taroan Official Site (Japanese Only)

 

In the Aizu area, Japanese deliciousness, from washoku to sweets to Japanese sake, is all lined up. Of course, there are historical sights and hot springs, but for people who also want to enjoy cuisine to their heart’s content, this region is perfect. If you come to Japan, please visit the Aizu region.

 

 


英語

Good news, everyone! Three people can win a tour around Aizuwakamatsu just by answering the quiz correctly!

Won’t you take this chance and apply? You can personally experience Aizu!

 

1. How many people were in the famous Byakkotai that ran away from the end of the tragedy in the Bakumatsu?

  A. 20   B. 40   C. 60 (Hint: The answer is in this article

2. What is the name of the city that popular tourism spot Spa Resort Hawaiians is in? 

  A. Machida City   B. Iwaki City   C. Sapporo (Hint: The answer is in this article

3. The Aizu area is famous for a type of liquor. What kind? 

  A. Beer   B. Shouchu  C. Japanese Sake (Hint: The answer is in this article)

 

This application period has ended.

 

tsunagu Japan Travel

A full service DMC for travel agencies. See how we can use our experience and connections in Japan to create the perfect Japan tours for your clients!

More Details
Tohoku Feature

The information in this article is accurate at the time of publication.

tsunagu Japan Newsletter

Subscribe to our free newsletter and we'll show you the best Japan has to offer!

Subscribe Now!
Get your Japan discounts here!

About the author

tsunagu
tsunagu Japan
This is tsunagu Japan's official account.
  • Check out our writers’ top Japan travel ideas!

Restaurant Search

For travel agencies: We have a full service DMC that specializes in custom Japan tours. Check out how we can help you make your clients happy!