Oblaat

In Japan, oblaat (Japanese: オブラート, oburaato) is a thin, edible layer of starch used to wrap some candies[1] and pharmaceuticals, similar to capsules.

Oblaat
TypeConfectionery
Place of originJapan
Main ingredientsStarch

Description

Many types of dagashi Japanese candy are wrapped in oblaat, which is an edible, thin cellophane made of rice starch. It has no taste nor odor, and is transparent. It is useful to preserve gelatinous sweets by absorbing humidity.

Etymology

The name comes from the Dutch word "oblaat".[1]

History

Oblaat was introduced to Japan by Dutch pharmaceutical companies in the late 19th century to wrap bad tasting medicine so that it could be swallowed without tasting any bitter powder. Dagashi isn't wrapped in oblaat because it tastes bad; it's wrapped in oblaat to keep the pieces of candy from sticking together.[2]

gollark: Maybe as an auxiliary part on swords...
gollark: I normally try and go stone → steel/obsidian → cobalt.
gollark: Which is very slightly more annoying than cobble!¬
gollark: Every time I make a tool, I end up reading half of the materials bit of Materials & You for some reason.
gollark: Versus stone, I mean.

See also

References

  1. http://www.oblate.co.jp/index7.html
  2. "In Our Candy Drawer - Dagashi". Candy Atlas. 2017-02-25. Retrieved September 14, 2017.
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