Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

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Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

White soy sauce, with its light color and distinct sweetness, enhances both savory dishes and desserts. Experience its unique flavor in Hekinan City, the birthplace of white soy sauce, and savor some of Japan's finest cuisine.

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HAKKO - Discover Japan's Fermented Food Culture-

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Fermented foods are essential to the deliciousness of Japanese cuisine. We will introduce the appeal of fermented foods from Nagoya, a city that has developed a unique culture thanks to its blessed natural environment.

Situated south of Nagoya and overlooking Mikawa Bay, Hekinan is a manufacturing city with a rich culinary history. Notably, it's the origin of white soy sauce and white dashi, and the location of Kokonoe Mirin, the brewery that originated Mikawa Mirin in Japan. These key fermented ingredients play a vital role in Japanese cuisine.

We invite you to embark on a culinary journey to Hekinan to taste and learn how these unique products transform the flavor of dishes.

1. Arigato no Sato: Discover Well-Kept Secrets of Japanese Cuisine

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Begin your exploration of Hekinan's culinary treasures at Arigato no Sato, a facility run by Hichifuku Brewing Co., Ltd. Established in 1950, Hhichifuku Brewing is the original producer of white soy sauce and white dashi; it is currently the only manufacturer with JAS organic certification for its white soy sauce. 

Soy sauce is made by fermenting soybeans and wheat, but the main feature of white soy sauce is the ratio of its ingredients. Regular soy sauce is about half soybeans and half wheat, but white soy sauce is made mainly from wheat, with only a small amount of soybeans. For this reason, white soy sauce is characterized by its light color and high sugar content, which allows it to bring out the natural flavors of other ingredients used in cooking.

Shiro Dashi is a delicate Japanese-style dashi soy sauce made by blending organic white soy sauce with dashi made from carefully selected ingredients such as rare dried bonito flakes, domestic dried shiitake mushrooms (thick donko mushrooms), and Hokkaido kelp. This versatile dashi can be used as a base for a variety of Japanese dishes, including miso soup, tamagoyaki, and simmered dishes.

Hhichifuku Brewery takes pride in being the first to develop white dashi, and maintains its outstanding quality through carefully selected ingredients and strict quality control.

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Discover the art of white soy sauce and white dashi production with a captivating tour of the Hichifuku Brewery at Arigato no Sato. Witness the craftsmanship, explore historical displays, and see the equipment firsthand! A highlight of the tour is the tasting session, where you'll savor dishes like a light soup, fluffy omelet, and crisp pickles, all enhanced by the brewery's signature ingredients.

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

You can recreate these culinary delights at home by purchasing Hichifuku Brewery's products at their shop, including vegetarian vegetable white dashi, “Kyo mo Tamagoyaki ♪” omelet seasoning, and unique white soy sauce-infused treats.

To apply for a tour of the "Arigato no Sato" factory, click here

Arigato no Sato (Thank You Village)

Arigato no Sato (Thank You Village)

447-0869 2-7 Yamagamicho , Hekinan City, Aichi Prefecture
Since its founding in 1950, Hichifuku Jozo—the first brewery in Japan to make white dashi—has been particular about the quality of raw materials and has pursued creating products that are friendly to people. To express our gratitude for making delicious white soy sauce, the word ""thank you'"" is written on the preparation tank and product label. The white soy sauce that is the base of Shiro Dashi (white soup stock) is a clear amber-colored soy sauce made from 90% organic wheat. Since wheat is the main ingredient, it has a high sugar content and a strong sweet taste. At Hichifuku Jozo's factory, Arigato no Sato, you can learn about the process of making white soy sauce, white dashi, and the secret behind their delicious taste. You can sample freshly squeezed white soy sauce and try dishes using white dashi that can be easily made at home. With a rich lineup and recipes for how to use them, you'll have fun choosing souvenirs. Due to our commitment to safe and reliable ingredients, we switched to organic wheat and soybeans. In 2001, we also obtained organic Japanese Agricultural Standards (JAS) certification. *The product price in the introduction photo is as of March 2025.

2. Enfance : Try Exquisite Desserts Made with White Soy Sauce

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Enfance a charming confectionery in Hekinan, is the creation of a skilled patissier who returned to his hometown after training in Nagoya, Tokyo, and Chiba. The shop features a diverse selection of handcrafted cakes, puddings, and baked goods. 

In recent years, Enfants has gained popularity for its innovative desserts that use local ingredients such as white soy sauce and Hatcho miso. One dessert you should definitely try is the "White Soy Sauce Pudding" (370 yen), which has a unique white soy sauce flavor. Why not compare it to the original pudding?

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

The Shiroshoyu Pudding at Enfance is a revelation! Its incredibly smooth texture is perfectly balanced by the delicate saltiness and umami of white soy sauce, which beautifully complements the traditional sweetness of the pudding. 

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

As the puddings are best enjoyed fresh, on the same day, how about buying some only to enjoy as a dessert at your hotel?  

Take your time to browse Enfance's innovative confections and experience how they creatively incorporate fermented ingredients into everyday sweets.

Please take the time to browse through Enfance's innovative sweets and experience how Enfance creatively incorporates fermented foods into everyday treats.

Enfance

Enfance

447-0064 4-51-1 Mount Nishi , Hekinan City, Aichi Prefecture
Enfance (French for ""childhood"") makes desserts using local ingredients and has many original and exciting ideas from the owner Ogasawara, who proclaims ""I never want to forget my childhood."" The products use traditionally brewed seasonings of this region that reflect the owner's passion and uniqueness. The White Soy Sauce Pudding has a groundbreaking delicious taste. It was crafted in collaboration with Yamashin Soy Sauce located next door, who wanted to explore new possibilities for white soy sauce. Please try comparing the smooth and uniquely salty pudding with the original flavor. You can enjoy a new world of sweets, such as madeleines made with Hatcho miso and white soy sauce, which are created with an exquisite balance of rich butter and fermented seasonings. Each dessert showcases unique characteristics.

3. Kobanten: Enjoy First-Class Hitsumabushi - Coal-Grilled Unagi Eel, a Specialty of Nagoya

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

For lunch, try Kobanten, a century-old Hekinan restaurant specializing in refined Japanese cuisine. They prioritize local ingredients, including Mikawa Bay seafood, regional vegetables, and fermented staples like mirin, soy sauce, and miso. 

The chef, trained away from his hometown, crafts seasonal menus that complement the standard offerings, ensuring a fresh culinary experience with each visit.

For a Nagoya specialty, try the Hitsumabushi (4,400 yen), a coal-grilled unagi (Japanese eel) dish. This dish offers several ways to enjoy grilled unagi eel: with wasabi radish, mixed with rice, as ochazuke (with green tea), and with green onion and other ingredients. Each combination highlights a different aspect of the eel's flavor, making it a truly enriching Nagoya experience.

Enjoy the different flavors of eel in different combinations, such as simply topping it with wasabi, mixing it with rice, sprinkling it with rice crackers and matcha green tea and eating it with spring onions and your favorite condiments, and you'll be able to enjoy the rich flavors of Aichi.

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Alternatively, explore Kobanten's seasonal menu for unique Hekinan flavors. During our spring 2025 visit, we enjoyed the Hatcho Miso Fondue. Hatcho miso, a premium Nagoya soybean miso, is known for its deep aroma and rich texture, and is used in a wide range of dishes, from everyday meals like miso soup and stewed udon to luxurious dishes that add color to special occasions.

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Understanding Hatcho miso's special status illuminates the brilliance of Kobanten's fondue. This unique menu allows you to savor vegetables, fried delicacies, and unagi eel in a warm, rich Hatcho miso sauce. Enhance your experience with seven creative toppings, including cocoa mass, mustard, and Parmesan, each transforming the flavor profile. This remarkable dish showcases Hekinan's rich culinary traditions. 

Kobanten, located a brief walk from Hekinan Chuo Station, is a highlight of any visit to the city.
※Hekinan City Sakatsuka-cho's "Kobanten Hanare Japanese cuisine Itto" is a sister restaurant of Kobanten.

Japanese cuisine Kobanten

Japanese cuisine Kobanten

447-0872 256 Genji Shinmeicho , Hekinan City, Aichi Prefecture Prefect...
A restaurant with delicious Mikawa food and charcoal-grilled eel. The Mikawa region is blessed with seafood and vegetables that are unique to Mikawa Bay. It is also a production area with many breweries that have a unique brewing culture, such as mirin, soy sauce, and soybean miso. By connecting with fishers, farmers, and seasoning producers, we continue to challenge ourselves through new creative dishes while preserving local flavors. The owner, who has trained as a chef outside of Hekinan, has a deep understanding of the local ingredients. His dishes, which showcase local ingredients, are profoundly delicious and impressive. We offer the flavors of Mikawa's four seasons using our tradition since our founding in 1919. These techniques have been cultivated by our chefs and incorporate new sensibilities.

4. Kinbara Saketen: Find Local Souvenirs, from Beverages to Snacks and Crafts

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Just a short walk from Kobanten, Kinbara Saketen, a liquor and local goods shop, enlivens Hekinan with its casual bar setup. 

Kinbara Saketen encourages tasting before purchase, offering a drinking area where customers can sample their extensive selection. This includes nearly 400 types of nihonshu from across Japan, as well as shochu, wine, beer, and other Japanese liquors. Embracing the traditional "kakuuchi" culture of on-site alcohol consumption, Kinbara Saketen aims to revitalize and popularize this custom in Nagoya.

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Kinbara Saketen is more than just a liquor shop; it's a treasure trove of Hekinan specialties. Discover a curated selection of local products perfect for souvenirs, including essential cooking ingredients like mirin from all five producers in Hekinan, white soy sauce, and white dashi, alongside delectable local snacks and drink accompaniments. 

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Their original merchandise, featuring T-shirts, caps, badges, stickers, and unique maekake aprons crafted from repurposed fabrics, offers a fun and stylish way to remember your Hekinan visit.

If you like good alcohol, come to Kanehara Sake Shop to taste some and find the perfect bottle to take home as a souvenir. The selection of non-alcoholic drinks and snacks is a treasure trove of flavors, allowing you to enjoy the unique flavors of this region.

Kinbara Saketen (Liquor Store)

Kinbara Saketen (Liquor Store)

447-0035 6-7 Nakayama Town, Hekinan City Aichi Prefecture
Kinbara Saketen (Liquor Store), whose motto is ""making alcohol fun and cool,"" not only sells alcoholic beverages. The store has been attracting local attention on social media platforms and YouTube as a ""playable liquor store"" that holds events such as ""kaku-uchi,"" the custom of drinking alcohol inside a liquor store. Sake and seasonings from Aichi Prefecture are also sold here, including products from the five Mirin breweries in Hekinan. You'll be surprised at the variety of products, including shochu that the owner personally purchases from breweries around the country and rare sake that is only available for a limited time. We are also putting effort into product development and exhibits that provide easy-to-understand explanations of how to split and drink alcohol. Therefore, overseas visitors who are not familiar with Japanese alcohol can easily enjoy it.

5. Kokonoe Mirin: Taste Heavenly Desserts Using Mirin, the Secret Ingredient of Japanese Cuisine

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Conclude your culinary journey with a visit to the historic Kokonoe Mirin factory, established in 1772. As the originators of Mikawa mirin, a fundamental seasoning in Japanese cuisine, Kokonoe Mirin offers a glimpse into the heart of this essential ingredient. 

Mirin, a fermented alcoholic seasoning, is created by combining glutinous rice, rice malt and shochu (distilled liquor) and then saccharifying and maturing it. This seasoning imparts a delicate sweetness, a lustrous glaze, and nuanced flavor to sauces, marinades, teriyaki glazes, and simmered dishes, all from rice. Mirin is a sweet condiment made by fermenting a mixture of glutinous rice, rice malt, and shochu (distilled alcohol). This condiment adds a delicate rice sweetness, glossy shine, and rich flavor to sauces, marinades, teriyaki sauces, stews, and more.

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Discover the secrets of mirin and the rich traditions of Hekinan on a tour of the Kokonoe Factory. Your Toyotomi tour guide will teach you about the incredible properties of mirin in an entertaining and engaging way that will transform your understanding of Japanese cuisine.

The history exhibition room, featuring a map of the Mikawa region from the Edo period, offers valuable insight into the cultural importance of mirin, while Kokonoe's storehouse is over 300 years old, its historic black-walled wooden building a testament to the region's prosperous water transport days.

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Photo provided by Kokonoe

If you want to fully enjoy Kokonoe, we recommend Restaurant & Cafe K-an, where the mirin's flavor-enhancing power is utilized in every dish. The satisfying lunch menu includes grilled fish and vegetable dishes marinated in moromi.

Hekinan: Culinary Delights in the Hometown of White Soy Sauce

Don't miss their exceptional dessert menu, featuring mirin-flavored puddings, ice cream, and a unique cheesecake crafted with mirin lees. The magic of mirin lies in its transformation: boiling evaporates the alcohol, leaving behind a caramel-like sauce with a natural sweetness and exquisite aroma, turning desserts into extraordinary culinary delights.

K-AN's mirin desserts are the perfect finale to your Hekinan culinary journey. You'll likely leave with a newfound appreciation for Japanese cuisine and a desire to try mirin-inspired recipes at home. Explore recipes on Kokonoe Mirin's website and elevate your cooking skills with Hekinan's flavors. 

To apply for the Mirinzo experience, click here

Kokonoe Mirin

Kokonoe Mirin

447-8603 2-11 Hamaderacho , Hekinan City, Aichi Prefecture
Founded in 1772, this brewery is the birthplace of Mikawa mirin, with over 250 years of history. They continue to make mirin using traditional methods from the past. It also has a history of introducing mirin to the world for the first time when it was exhibited at the Paris World Exposition in 1900. The Kokonoe Okura , with its distinctive black walls, is a registered tangible cultural property. You can learn about the depth and enjoyment of mirin by visiting the Kokonoe Mirin Historical Museum, which exhibits ancient documents and tools related to Kokonoe , or by taking a guided tour of the mirin brewery, where expert staff will give you a tour of part of the brewery. (Guided tours of the mirin brewery are held three times a week, on Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays from 10:00. Reservations are required.) After the guided tour of the mirin brewery, you can enjoy mirin tasting at the " Ishikawa Hachiroji Shoten" located on the premises, and take out the store-exclusive mirin soft serve ice cream. The wide variety of mirin products, including the carefully crafted Hon Mirin made at the mirin brewery where Mikawa Mirin originated, are sure to make an exceptional souvenir.

Access: How to Get to Hekinan

Hekinan is accessible from Nagoya Airport (NGO) in approximately one hour and 21 minutes. Take a limousine bus from Terminal 1 to Kariyashi Station, then transfer to the Meitetsu Mikawa Line train to Hekinan Chuo Station. 

From Nagoya Station, you can take the JR Tokaido Main Line bound for Okazaki to Kariya Station, then change to the Meitetsu Mikawa Line to Hekinan Station. (Hekinan Chuo Station is the next station to Hekinan Station. Kitashinkawa Station is two stations before Hekinan Station.) All the places featured in this itinerary are within walking distance or a short taxi ride from the nearest station.

Hekinan may not have any spectacular tourist spots, but it is a culinary treasure trove. For foodies and those looking for authentic Japanese cuisine, Hekinan is a must-visit destination and promises a life-changing dining experience.

HAKKO - Discover Japan's Fermented Food Culture-

Fermented foods are essential to the deliciousness of Japanese cuisine. We will introduce the appeal of fermented foods from Nagoya, a city that has developed a unique culture thanks to its blessed natural environment.

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