When my wife and I went to Japan last year, we structured a fair amount of our daily plans—particularly what neighborhoods to visit—around information that we had gathered from a cherished Japanese television show.
Believe it or not, we took our trip ideas from episodes of Kantaro: The Sweet Tooth Salaryman, which streams on Netflix.
If you’ve ever seen the show, I imagine you’re rather surprised to hear this.
Kantaro is a comedy series that centers around a new member of a book publisher’s sales team.
More specifically, it is how Mr. Kantaro Ametani navigates between two competing identities: the impressively talented and serious salesman, and the dessert fanatic who secretly plays hooky during work hours to indulge his sweet tooth.
Not only is the plot fictional and very silly, it is also fantastically weird:
Kantaro will literally embody the traits of the desserts he eats.
And when he takes his first bite, there are usually some impressionistic reaction shots that can be…quite suggestive.
The show is an uncanny mix of clever puns, surrealism, and clownish humor.
Of course, unless you know Japanese, all you get is the surrealism and the over-the-top clownishness.
But, there’s another important element to the show:
The food porn!
Each episode is centered around a specific dessert, as served in a real restaurant in Tokyo or Yokohama.
For all its surreal silliness, the heart of Kantaro is its serious foodie journalism.
What my wife and I took from the show was a list of destinations to visit for our very own Sweets Tour.
Unfortunately, we only managed to make it to two of the featured sweet shops. Our very first destination proved to be a bust.
We visited the charming, historic Kagurazaka district in search of the wa-sweets shop Kinozen.
Wa-sweets are Western desserts fused with Japanese flavors. Kantaro dedicated an episode to Kinozen’s fabled matcha bavarois.
Unfortunately, it will forever remain fabled to us, because we found that Kinozen had since closed down.
Thankfully, great food is not a rarity in Tokyo. We stumbled on a tea house that served some phenomenal sweets.
This was Saryo, and it’s become a new favorite place of ours.
My wife enjoyed a delicious chestnut cake, while I tried their take on anmitsu. It was absolutely heavenly.
Now, anmitsu is the topic of a different episode from Kantaro…
That one focuses on a shop called Kanmidokoro Hatsune. We later traveled to the Ningyocho district and found the shop, and we got some more anmitsu.
Kantaro did not lie. This place was legit.
In truth, both of the shops made some incredible anmitsu. But the adzuki beans served in Hatsune were the best I’ve ever had.
Perfectly textured, with a complex flavor profile. So if I had to pick a winner, I’d probably pick Hatsune.
The next destination in our tour was to be Tengoku Cafe, a place known for their exquisitely fluffy pancakes.
But alas, some bad information on Google Maps brought us to a place that was nowhere near Tengoku Cafe. Tired and hangry, we decided to check out some other options.
We found that we were quite close to another Kantaro location: Umemura, which was known for their mamekan.
This is a dish that’s quite close to anmitsu, but far more minimal. It’s just beans and dark molasses syrup. No distractions.
Umemura’s mamekan was indeed delicious. But I’m afraid my previous experience at Hatsune had tarnished this experience for me. No one will match the perfection of their beans!
Other planned destinations for our tour included:
…a place for artisanal kakigori, or Japanese style shaved ice…
…As well as a place known for their chestnut mont blanc cakes…
But alas, those plans didn’t work out. Still, there’s always next time.
What desserts we will try this coming April…
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Yum!
I have not seen the show and I have never tried any Japanese desserts. This is making me want to do both. A guy sneaking out of work to satisfy his sweet tooth is near and dear to my heart and further proof that “desserts is stressed spelled backwards” rings so true.
I definitely recommend Japanese desserts, though they tend to be smaller and less decadent than American sweets.
Kantaro is a supremely goofy show, obviously not for everyone, but I think most people would at least appreciate the food porn.
Sorry to hijack, but is anybody else unable to comment over on Stereogum? I’ve tried a couple of different browsers and the comments section is just missing.
Seems okay for me.
I am definitely a desserts person with a very sweet tooth so this has me salivating. I’m not gonna lie, Mamekan and Adzuki beans don’t immediately leap out as my idea of tempting sweet joy but I’d be willing to give them a go. That chestnut Mont Blanc cake is giving me come hither looks though.
My chicken and cauliflower curry thats cooking away for dinner doesn’t look so exciting now. I need sugar after reading this!!
Mamekan is indeed for hardcore fans of adzuki beans. Even some Japanese people are not so into it.
But I think most people would enjoy something like anmitsu, which includes the sweetened beans among many other components: agar jelly, mochi, fresh fruit, and that beautiful Okinawan molasses syrup (and sometimes whipped cream or ice cream).
My work friends make fun of me sometimes for my predilection for sweet bean pastes. But I’ve pointed out that, unlike chocolate, at least anko isn’t rotten sweet bean paste!
Mmmm…rotten sweet bean paste…
It’s all about the peanut butter for me. What can I say?
Something that my wife absolutely hates… 😀
Sadly however you will never be able to try the snake-flavoured icecream of Ikebukuro.
https://kotaku.com/ice-cream-can-get-bizarre-in-japan-1508055176
Damn. I would love to try some of those!
Sea urchin ice cream sounds damn intriguing. Natto ice cream…as long as there are no tendrils of slime like in the real thing.
Now, cow tongue ice cream? That sounds horrifying.
But I’d try it on a dare.
I’m the audience for this sort of thing. I was going to renew my Netflix membership when Stranger Things makes its belated return. Still bitter about the cancellation of both, GLOW and Ozark. Your description about Kantaro: The Sweet Tooth being part-documentary intrigues me. So it’s like Jiro Dreams of Sushi with fantasy sequences?
People here love J and K-dramas. And yet, they have little interest in each country’s respective cinemas. A show like Kantaro: The Sweet Tooth Salesman might be the perfect gateway from television to film.
Ha! No, don’t get your hopes up like that. It’s more like if the makers of Sailor Moon wanted to make a sitcom, but they wrote the scripts while they were really hungry.
Food-centered shows are more popular in Japan. There are a few others available on Netflix. I really like Midnight Diner, which centers the plot of each episode around one dish. And then there’s Samurai Gourmet, which is just as silly Kantaro, but not as interesting.
By chance, have you seen Takashi Murakami’s Jellyfish Eyes? The film was universally panned by American critics. Criterion, however, added it to their collection. I’m afraid to buy it. And on the other hand, I won’t watch it on The Criterion Channel because I have a strict rule about streaming films that are available for purchase. I nearly stopped buying CDs. I can at least support one industry.
Anime is like jazz to me. Outside of Hayao Miyazaki and Satashi Kon(crap, how can he be dead; I love Millennium Actress), I don’t know where to start. Who else is of this caliber?
I didn’t realize that Murakami had made a film. It looks kinda bad from the trailer, but I’ll give it a go.
“Who” else is maybe not the question to ask someone like me, since I am not an anime die hard. But what else might you want to check out?
Here are some that come to mind:
Akira
Metropolis (I guess Otomo is one “who”)
The Ghost in the Shell
Cat Soup
Kino’s Journey
Suzume (okay, I guess Makoto Shinkai is another name to check out, though his stuff is kind of wannabe Ghibli and yet sub-Ghibli. Still pretty good though)
Thank you for answering my post. The news cycle takes a lot out of me.
Yeah, same about Murakami. I thought he retired.