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Japanese food and cuisine are deeply rooted in the culture of seasonality. The idea is that nature provides what the body needs at the right time of year. Eating in harmony with seasonal changes guarantees the best and freshest ingredients, and this also extends to snacks and souvenirs.
These 18 ready-to-eat seasonal winter snacks showcase unique ingredient combinations and some of the finest natural products sourced from around Japan. Some are available all year round, while others are limited to seasonal availability that may also affect production cycles.
How we decided
- Ready to Eat or Easy to PreparePerfect for winter when you want warmth and comfort without extra effort
- Seasonal FlavorsEach item reflects Japan’s cold-weather cravings, from rich broths to cozy drinks
- High-Quality IngredientsWe prioritized products that taste clean, real, and close to homemade
- Great as SouvenirsGreat souvenirs that highlight Japan’s unique seasonal and regional tastes
Comfort Food
Winter in Japan is a time for rich broths, hearty root vegetables, and slow-cooked comfort.
1. Japanese Curry
House Curry stands out because it genuinely tastes like something you’d order in a nice restaurant, silky, aromatic, and layered with depth.
House Foods builds the sauce from sautéed onions, tomato, beef bouillon, spices, and a touch of red wine, giving it a mellow richness that feels slow-cooked. The medium spice level will suit most palates.
Since each packet heats up in just a few minutes, it’s perfect for quick dinners, and you can eat it with rice, couscous, flat bread, or as you please.
2. Freeze-Dried Miso Soup
Amano Foods is known for producing freeze-dried soups so good that most people can’t believe they aren’t freshly made. This miso soup set includes five varieties, namely eggplant, tofu, green onion, nameko mushrooms, and stir-fried vegetables, with two servings for each.
The freeze-drying process preserves the aroma and texture while avoiding artificial seasonings. All you do is add hot water, and the ingredients rehydrate to a remarkably natural state.
These soups are great for work lunchboxes, travel, or keeping in your desk drawer for a warm snack.
3. Instant Corn Potage
Gin no Mori corn potage has the kind of creamy, comforting sweetness you usually find in Japanese cafés. Made with real sweet corn, the soup has a velvety consistency that feels homemade. You can warm it by placing the unopened pouch in hot water or by microwaving the contents.
It’s delicious on its own, but also wonderful served with crusty bread, poured over cooked potatoes, or used as a mild sauce for chicken or vegetables.
4. Kansai-Style Kombu Dashi
Izuru is an additive-free dashi that brings together Hokkaido kelp and bonito flakes from Shizuoka in a way that reflects the subtle, refined flavors of Kansai cooking. Unlike instant granular dashi, you boil the pack in water like a tea bag to extract the 100% natural flavor. There’s no waste because, afterward boiling, you can tear the pack and use the fresh contents on rice, pickles, or as you like.
The gentle umami flavor makes this dashi ideal for miso soups, hot pots, chawan mushi, or simmered vegetables. If you want to learn more about this traditional Japanese broth, you can read our dashi guide.
Japanese Drinks to Warm You Up
5. Sesame Latte
Kuki Kuro is a rich, nutty, aromatic sesame latte. Each serving contains roughly 6,000 crushed sesame seeds. Lightly sweetened with cane sugar and kinako soybean powder, it has a balanced, mellow sweetness. There are no additives or caffeine, making it suitable for kids or nighttime sipping. It works beautifully in hot or cold milk, and you can also use it to flavor baked goods, oatmeal, ice cream, or smoothies.
A typical serving is two heaped teaspoons, and with no individual packs, it is more versatile and produces less waste.
6. Matcha Latte Powder
Made by Tsujiri, one of Kyoto’s most respected matcha brands, this koicha latte powder blends premium Uji matcha with milk powder to create a creamy, satisfying drink. The koicha or thick matcha effect gives this blend a deeper color and richer flavor than most other matcha lattes.
Enjoy it with hot water, milk, or soy milk, or mix it into ice cream, pancakes, or baked goods for a green tea twist.
7. Morinaga Milk Cocoa
A Japanese household staple since 1919, Morinaga’s cocoa blend creates a creamy, nostalgic hot chocolate with a distinctly smooth texture. The powder blends premium cocoa with milk solids, giving you a satisfying drink simply by mixing 20g of powder with a 120 ml cup of hot water or milk. Its classic flavor is popular with both children and adults and versatile enough to use in baking, desserts, or cold cocoa.
If you want something that feels comforting and familiar, this is a perfect choice.
8. High-Grade Loose-Leaf Sencha Tea
Premium Suisouen Sencha brews a bright green infusion with a lively aroma. It has the clean, balanced taste typical of high-quality Japanese green tea. The leaves re-infuse well, allowing multiple cups from a single serving. Brew it at a slightly lower temperature (around 70–80°C) to enjoy its natural sweetness and gentle umami.
It makes an elegant gift for tea lovers or anyone who appreciates Japanese tea culture.
9. Plum Ume Drinking Vinegar
This flavorful Tokiwa drinking vinegar comes in a small bottle and combines Japanese ume (plum) with a mellow drinking vinegar for a refreshing balance of sweetness and tang. It’s easy to dilute with water, sparkling water, or even hot water for a winter-friendly drink. Many people also use it as a mixer for cocktails or mocktails.
Because it's premixed, it has a gentle flavor that’s less intense than straight vinegar drinks, making it approachable even for first-timers.
10. Lemon Yuzu & Ginger Drinking Vinegar
Tokiwa also produces a unique yuzu vinegar drink that blends aromatic yuzu citrus with warming ginger and vinegar, creating a beverage that works beautifully hot or cold. It also doubles as a cocktail mixer or dessert drizzle. The special stork ginger is sourced from the Tajima Highlands in Hyogo Prefecture.
Dilute with water, sparkling water, or tea, depending on the season. The citrus aroma is uplifting, and the ginger adds a soothing note ideal for chilly months.
11. “Yanagi” Junmai Ginjo Sake Rice Wine (Not Available in the US)
Tsuki no Katsura junmai ginjo sake rice wine is handcrafted in Kyoto using traditional techniques that prioritize aroma and refinement. The profile is a gentle fruitiness and a smooth, slightly dry finish that feels balanced and elegant.
This sake can be enjoyed chilled, at room temperature, or lightly warmed, depending on the dish or season. Its versatility and light fragrance make it a great bottle to introduce to someone new to premium sake.
12. Organic Cooking Sake (Available in the US Only)
This Fukumitsuya cooking sake is from organic rice from Hyogo with no added alcohol. It can enhance a wide range of dishes with a mild sweetness, subtle aroma, and deeper umami. You will find it particularly good for tenderizing meats, enriching soups, and brightening simmered dishes. Because it’s pure rice sake, the flavor is clean, elegant, and a noticeable step up from standard cooking sake and it’s suitable for drinking as well.
Fukumitsuya is the oldest and most historic brewery in Kanazawa. It’s an excellent Japanese pantry staple if you enjoy Japanese cuisine or fusion cooking.
Seasonal Snacks & Winter Specialties
13. Dried Persimmon Sticks
Ichidagaki dried persimmon sticks are made using the traditional hoshigaki method, which air-dries whole persimmons until they develop a natural white bloom and honey-like sweetness. The flavor is rich and mellow, with a soft, chewy texture that pairs beautifully with tea or cheese. They’re completely free of added sugar, relying entirely on the persimmon’s natural sweetness, and each persimmon stick is carefully prepared to ensure bite-sized perfection. If you want a traditional Japanese winter treat, this is one of the most classic options.
14. Umeboshi with Honey
These plump, naturally pickled nanko plums come from Wakayama, Japan’s most famous ume-growing region. Pickled and then finished with honey, they have a softer, more approachable flavor than traditional salty-sour umeboshi. The texture is tender, the sweetness subtle, and the overall taste extremely well-balanced.
They’re delicious with plain rice, used inside onigiri, or served as a refreshing side dish. If you’ve found umeboshi too intense in the past, this is an ideal entry point.
15. Jerky Japanese Wagyu (Not Available in the US)
This small-batch Nick Jerky is made from genuine Japanese Wagyu, which translates into a uniquely tender chew with an intensely savory flavor. Instead of being overly dry or tough, it retains some of Wagyu’s signature richness, making each bite satisfying and deeply umami.
The portion size is compact, making it a great gourmet gift or travel snack. It’s the kind of specialty product you won’t find outside Japan unless you order from niche retailers.
16. Dried Sweet Potatoes Hoshi-Imo
Hoshi-imo, or dried sweet potatoes, are a beloved winter snack in Japan, made by slicing the potatoes and sun-drying them until they become tender, chewy, and naturally sweet. These dried slices taste almost caramel-like, with no sugar or additives needed.
They’re nutritious, fiber-rich, and ideal for snacking straight from the bag, although you can also warm them lightly to enhance the flavor. Many people enjoy them with tea as a wholesome alternative to sweets.
Jams & Spreads
17. Tokiwa Ume Plum Jam
Tokiwa Ume is an unusual jam that combines Japanese ume, or plum, with apple vinegar and honey to create a sweet-tart spread that’s refreshing and bright. It’s basically a rich confiture, perfect for spreading on toast, mixing into yogurt, enjoying with pastries, or even as a glaze for pork or chicken.
The plums are nanko plums from Wakayama, known for their fleshy texture. The balance of acidity and sweetness gives it a flavor profile that’s different from typical fruit jams, making it appealing for people who enjoy slightly tangy spreads. It’s a jar that tends to disappear quickly once opened.
18. Organic Sweet Potato Spread
Made from organic Japanese sweet potatoes, this Chikyubatake spread is naturally creamy and lightly sweet, creating a comforting flavor that feels homemade. It’s excellent on toast, inside pastries, or stirred into warm oats. Some people even use it as a filling for cookies or mochi.
Free from additives, it highlights the gentle sweetness of high-quality sweet potatoes and works beautifully for breakfast or baking.
Stuff Your Pantry and Your Stockings
As we approach the year-end, you may just find yourself in a pickle for Christmas presents and seasonal gifts. It’s hard to get it right every time, so the best choice is often something that can be shared around, even if, or in case, you get it wrong.
That’s where knowing which Japanese foods, drinks, and snacks will hit the spot comes in handy. From the best quality and additive-free soups, curries, instant lattes, dried fruit treats, unique citrus drinks, and original jams, we feel confident there is something here for everyone.



















