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Posted: 2016-08-26T23:05:03Z | Updated: 2016-09-09T19:06:28Z Eat Your Way Through Japan With Ice Cream | HuffPost

Eat Your Way Through Japan With Ice Cream

Eat Your Way Through Japan With Ice Cream
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Across the country, roadside stalls, breweries, and small shops serve an unexpected and regionally diverse delicacy: soft serve

By Hannah Kirshner , SAVEUR

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Endless flavors of soft cream.
Hannah Kirshner

In a country with some 300 regionally and seasonally specific varieties of Kit-Kit bar and different specialty snacks at every train station, Japan has no shortage of ways to collect limited edition foods. One of the less appreciated genresand my personal favoriteis soft serve ice cream.

Soft cream, as its called in Japan, is a souvenir you cant take home with you, but thats part of the pleasure: you can only taste it right there in that moment. If you live in Japan, etiquette requires that when you take a business trip you bring back a treat from that city for your coworkers and familysuch as chick-shaped manju sweets from Tokyo or roasted twig tea from Kaga. But the soft cream is just for you.

According to the Japanese Soft Cream Commission, soft cream was introduced by American occupying forces on their (American) Independence Day celebration in 1951, and later that year department stores all over the country started serving it. Like so many inventions that Japan has adopted from other cultures and made all their own (and, arguably, way better), Japans soft cream has its own delightful range of flavors, many particular to certain cities, towns, or single shops. Matcha, kuro-goma (black sesame), and kinako (nutty toasted soybean flour) are as ubiquitous in Japan as chocolate and vanilla in the U.S., and almost every town has its own special flavor.

Japans road stations (great places to eat, unlike most American rest stops) often feature soft cream flavored with the areas famous crops, from potato to peach. Factories and farms offer visitors soft cream in keeping with their product, whether miso, melon, or rose petals. There are novelty cones like udon (with noodles wrapped around the ice cream) in Kagawa and and fried oyster in Okayama that are mostly for shock valuebut most of the flavors, even if they sound unusual, taste fantastic.

Here are 10 to look for in Japan, organized roughly from the south of the country to the north.

Purple Sweet Potato (Beni-Imo) at Onno Confectionary Palace, Okinawa

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Purple Sweet Potato
Hannah Kirshner

These nutrient dense purple sweet potatoes are part of a traditional Okinawan diet thats linked to longevity. Though the tubers are served in savory dishes such as tempura, at Onno Confectionary Palace youll find all kinds of beni-imosweets:tarts, candy, and of course a delightfully earthy, purple-hued soft cream.

Onno Confectionary PalaceYubinbango 904-0404Okinawa PrefectureKunigami-gun Onna Serakaki 100

Mikan (Mandarin orange) Soft Cream at Yoshiumi Road Station in Ehime

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Mandarin Orange
Hannah Kirshner

The best mikanthose sweet-as-candy easy-to-peel seedless mandarinscome from Ehime, and the juicy, tangy little seedless oranges are a treat themselves (they sell for anywhere from a dollar a pound to eight dollars for one fruit). This pit stop on the Shimanami Kaido, a road that you can travel by bicycle or car over seven bridges between islands populated with citrus groves, offers seafood barbecue, and of course creamy pale orange mikan soft cream.

Yoshiumi Road Station Yubinbango794-2114Imabari, Ehime PrefectureYoshiumi name 4520-2

Sake Kasu Soft Cream at Shishi no Sato in Yamanaka Onsen

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Sake Kasu
Hannah Kirshner

Theres nothing like a cold dessert after a long soak in an onsen (a hot-spring-fed spa). This local sake brewerys shop, a block from Yamanaka Onsenss public bath, is a popular stop for locals and tourists alike: they offer sake kasusoft cream, sweetly aromatic and vaguely boozy with the smooth rice sediment from sake-making. It has the gentle flavor of sweet nigori sake.

Shishi no Sato Kaga, Ishikawa PrefectureYamanaka Onsen Honcho 2-chome

Blueberry Soft Cream at Beshodake Sky Deck service area in Noto

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Blueberry
Hannah Kirshner

The isolated Noto Peninsula grows blueberries that get made into jam, sweet wine (that tastes like jam), and of course soft cream. This service area boasts a sky deck with a spectacular view over the mountains to the coast, a well-stocked gift shop, and a good cafe. The soft cream is intensely fruity with real berries blended into the base. Swirled with vanilla, the striking purple ice cream is as beautiful as it is delicious.

Beshodake Sky Deck Ishikawa PrefectureNakajimamachi Bessyo, Noto Highway Bessyodake Service Area, Nanao 929-2202

Peanut Soft Cream at Kimura Peanuts in Chiba

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Peanut
Hannah Kirshner

In this suburb of Tokyo known for growing the finest peanuts, you can stop by shops dedicated entirely to themroasted, flavored, and made into myriad snack foods. The volcanic soil here is ideal for growing them, and the peanuts you buy in Chiba are fresher and more flavorful than what youll find almost anywhere else. The venerable Kimura Peanut plant is a good place to load up on peanutty souvenirsand enjoy a rich peanut soft cream.

Kimura 236-3 Shimosanagura Tateyama Chiba

Volcanic Ash Vanilla Soft Cream at Owaku-dani in Kanagawa

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Volcanic Ash
Hannah Kirshner

This volcanic valley of Mt. Hakone has a reputation for black boiled eggs, cooked and colored by the sulphurous natural hot springs. If thats not your cup of tea, try a soft cream blackened with volcanic ash. The ash doesnt add much flavorthe ice cream tastes like vanillabut the color is dramatically black, with a slightly powdery texture.

Owaku-daniKanagawa Prefecture1251 Sengokuhara, Ashigarashimo-gun, Hakone-machi 250-0631

Satsuma-Imo (Yam) Soft Cream at Imokin Mandago in Asakusa

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Sweet Potato
Hannah Kirshner

When you visit Sensoji temple in Asakusa, its hard to miss the satsumai-imo(sweet yam)snacks this Tokyo neighborhood is known for. The purple-skinned, yellow-fleshed yams are made into imo-yokan (firm sweet potato jelly candy), and daigaku imo (fried and syrup coated chunks of yam dotted with sesame seeds). Naturally, theres satsuma-imo soft cream too, and it truly tastes like sweet potato. Youll find many soft cream vendors around Sensoji, but this satsuma-imo sweets shop makes a particularly good one.

Imokin Mandago Yubinbango111-0032Taito-ku, Tokyo Asakusa 1-21-5

Soy Sauce and Miso, at Yamaki Jozo in Saitama

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Soy Sauce and Miso
Hannah Kirshner

At this organic brewery, where cookbook author Nancy Singleton Hachisu likes to take visitors, the soy sauce is eye-openingly complex and the ponzu is good enough to drink. Another highlight is the salty-sweet miso and soy sauce flavors of soft cream, which are reminiscent of a gently salted caramel, not harsh at all, with a hint of umami backing the velvety cool sweetness of the ice cream.

Yamaki Jozo Yubinbango367-0311Saitama PrefectureKodama-gun Kamikawa-cho Oaza Shimoaguhara 955

Egg Soft Cream at Michi no Eki Hinai Tottokan in Akita

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Egg
Hannah Kirshner

Akita prefectures hardy Hinaidori chickensornate brown feathered hens and multi-colored roostersare considered a national treasure. Pull off the highway in Akita to get skewers of hinadori yakitoriand golden-hued egg flavored ice cream. The color is so dramatic Im not convinced its entirely derived from eggs, but the extra-custardy richness sets it apart. Once in a while youll find an apologetic sign when they cant source enough hinadori eggs to make the soft cream.

Michi no Eki Hinai Tottokan Akita PrefectureOdate Hinai Senda Catedral Nueva Tsutsumishita 93-11

Hokkaido Milk on Soft Cream Street in Hokodate

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Hokkaido Milk
Hannah Kirshner

Hokodate city may be the ultimate destination for soft cream lovers: theres an entire street flanked by soft cream vendors offering everything from pure milk flavor to local melon, seaweed, scallop, and squid ink. Because its the only part of Japan geographically suited to large-scale dairy farming, Hokkaido produces ice cream with reputation for exceptionally high quality, so take a stroll down the street and sample as much ice cream as you can.

More Japan:

This article originally appeared on Saveur .

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