In collaboration with the Cherry Blossom Festival, join us to make wagashi, traditional vegan and gluten-free Japanese sweets.
IMPORTANT INSTRUCTIONS:
There are two sessions available. Please sign up for one session only.
Session 1- 4pm-5:30pm
Session 2- 6pm-7:30pm
Recommended Donation: $15 (ticket price is pay as you wish on a sliding scale)
The recommended donation will continue to support Culinary Literacy programs at Free Library of Philadelphia locations.
This program is recommended for adults and teens. Please note, because of the level of concentration and instruction required to make wagashi, tickets for this program are limited. Please be sure you are able to attend before purchasing a ticket. If an unforseen situation arises that will prevent you from using your ticket, please let us know right away by emailing [email protected].
Tickets are sold on a sliding scale with the recommended donation being $15. All proceeds from ticket sales go towards supporting the Culinary Literacy Center’s programs for youth and adults, neighborhood engagement, and English language learning. A limited number of free tickets are available for SNAP-eligible families and for anyone who cannot afford the donation right now but would still like to participate. Please email [email protected] for more information.
More about the event:
The Cherry Blossom Festival is a beloved annual Philadelphia tradition, when we welcome the arrival of spring by celebrating beautiful and fragrant trees coming into flower. This year, we are pleased to partner with the Japan America Society of Greater Philadelphia to bring you a hands-on Japanese confectionary workshop.
Wagashi are traditional sweets served as part of a Japanese tea ceremony . Made with rice flour and filled with ingredients such as red bean paste, Wagashi are naturally vegan and gluten-free. (If you have dietary restrictions or other questions, please email us at [email protected]) These exquisite delicacies range in complexity, from simple forms to elaborate shapes, colors, and textures, depending on the skill of the wagashi-maker. The workshop will be led by Sachiko Houck, a long time tea practitioner in the Philadelphia area.
About the presenters:
Sachiko Houck was born in Fukuoka, Japan and is a self-taught wagashi artist out of necessity. As a long time practitioner of Chado, the Japanese Way of Tea, there was no place locally to purchase the sweets so necessary to the enjoyment of matcha tea, so Sachiko began experimenting with making her own. Since then, making and sharing wagashi with others has become her passion. She is a nurse practitioner by training and lives in Lancaster county with her husband, Brian.
Emi Houck, daughter of Sachiko Houck, has always enjoyed the process of creating (and eating!) aesthetically pleasing sweets. She has learned the ropes of preparing wagashi from her mother and now makes and sells them to matcha-focused tea houses in New Jersey and New York City. When not rolling up her sleeves making wagashi, she is teaching ESL to her high school students in Philadelphia. Find her wagashi on Instagram! @marumame.wagashi
Terry Yoshida Sherwin is a long time volunteer at the Japanese House and Garden in Philadelphia. Practicing CHADO for many years led to an interest in making the exquisite sweets for tea called wagashi. Terry grew up in Ardmore in a Japanese- Irish household. These days she is delighted to demonstrate and share her knowledge of the Way of Tea to groups, school and colleges throughout the area.