FOODS

Adzuki Beans

A small, deep-red East Asian legume sweetened into a paste (*anko*) that fills mochi, daifuku, and dorayaki — and the secret sweet ingredient in Japanese desserts everywhere.

A bean that’s mostly a dessert

In East Asia, adzuki beans are most often eaten sweet, not savory. They’re cooked with sugar into a thick paste called anko (Japanese), dousha (Chinese), or pat (Korean) — the most common bean filling in Asian sweets:

  • Daifuku — soft mochi wrapped around a sphere of red bean paste.
  • Dorayaki — pancake sandwich with anko filling (Doraemon’s favorite food).
  • Mooncakes — Chinese mid-autumn festival pastries with red bean paste.
  • Anpan — Japanese sweet roll filled with anko, invented in 1875.
  • Bingsu / Patbingsu — Korean shaved ice with sweet red bean topping.
  • Red bean ice cream — a global summer flavor.

Two paste styles

  • Tsubuan — chunky paste with whole or partly mashed beans.
  • Koshian — smooth paste with skins strained out.

The choice affects mouthfeel and the dessert’s overall texture. Both are sweetened to roughly 50–60% sugar by weight, which is lighter than European jam.

Savory uses (rarer)

In China, adzuki beans appear in some savory soups and zongzi (rice dumplings); in India, they’re sometimes used like other small beans. But the dessert tradition dominates so heavily that savory adzuki preparations are rare even in Asia.

Find more foods by letter

Adzuki Beans starts with A and ends with S. Browse other foods along the same letter.

Foods that contain a letter from "Adzuki Beans":