Pop-up store announcement (ended)
Pop-up store announcement (ended)
Hakodate Airport will host pop-up stores of the Japanese confectionery shop "Azuki no Hana" and the teahouse "Maruyamaen Chaho".
A-Getsu-no-Hana" will open in March 2023 in the eastern area of Hakodate. Each item is carefully handmade with the finest ingredients. Maruyamaen Chaho" has been a popular teahouse in Hakodate for a long time with stores in Suehiro-machi and Yukawa-machi in the city.
This time, we will be selling Japanese sweets perfect for early summer and a matcha (powdered green tea) set that allows visitors to experience making their own matcha. Please enjoy a moment of relaxation with delicious wagashi and tea.
We look forward to welcoming many visitors.
Date & Time: Saturday, June 15 and Sunday, June 16, 2024
10:00am - 3:00pm
*The event will end when all the Japanese sweets are gone.
Place: domestic flights Domestic Passenger Terminal Building 1F Central Hall
Products for sale: [Hana of the Moon
Hanijyu-mochi "Yukitama" with green tea cream
Mizu-yokan
Mizu-yokan (water sweet bean jelly)
Strawberry cake
Water yokan, water manju, warabimochi, etc...
Maruyamaen Tea Shop
Matcha set (with Japanese sweets and kompeito)
Store Introduction
<Aa Tsuki no Hana
A small Japanese confectionery with a view of the sea. We carefully select ingredients that are safe to eat, one by one.
We offer various kinds of wagashi depending on the season and the day. Please note that the number of sweets is limited because they are all made by a single craftsman.
We hope you will stop by while taking a leisurely drive along the seaside.
<Maruyamaen Tea Shop
Founded in the Edo period (1603-1867) as "Maruyama Juichiya," a tea and sake brewery, in Sayama, one of the tea-producing areas of the Musashino Pleistocene plateau in the Kanto region, where Japanese tea cultivation is said to have originated. Shigezo Ikeda, who grew up surrounded by tea plantations, helped his elder brother Shuji Ikeda start a tea store in Sendai City, Miyagi Prefecture, and later, in 1937, decided to settle permanently in Hokkaido Hakodate, the largest and most prosperous northern sea fishing center since Tokyo, to cultivate demand for tea.
The names of our products, "Musashino" and "Sayama," are named in honor of his hometown.