For the past two years my friends and I have celebrated the new year by going to the Bainbridge Island Mochi Festival. The festival is put on by the Bainbridge Island Japanese American Community (BIJAC), which uses the event as both a way to celebrate mochi tsuki, meaning the process of pounding sweet rice into patties, and to inform fellow islanders and out-of-town visitors of their history.

While the Mochi Festival is a time to reflect on the dark history of the island, it is first and foremost a time to have fun and learn about mochi tsuki. Mochi is one of the traditional foods eaten for the Japanese New Year celebration. Since mochi is pounded rice, in can be eaten many different ways. Most people are familiar with mochi surrounding icecream or cut into cubes to sprinkle on top of frozen yogurt. The traditional form mochi takes for New Year's day, however, is mochi kagami, meaning "mirror mochi". The mochi is made into two circular disks, one on top of the other, and topped with a bitter fruit, like an orange.
Once the rice was completely pounded, it was transferred inside. There, visitors were allowed to roll their own mochi. We were instructed to pull a small piece off with our fingers and, with our hands coated in rice flour, roll it into a ball. We then flattened the ball between our palms, and put a small amount of ahn, or red bean paste, in the center. We pinched the mochi up around the ahn, and again rolled it in our hands until we had our beautiful mochi.
Visitors were also given a cup of green tea and a bowl of ozoni soup to enjoy, the recipe for which is below.
Ozoni Soup
Ingredients
4 cups clear soup, such as dashi, chicken broth or vegetable broth
1 Tbsp soy sauce
1 tsp salt
4 pieces plain softened mochi (not with ahn in the center)
Vegetables such as carrots, spinach or daikon
8 slices kamaboko, or fishcake
Directions
Mix broth with soy sauce and salt.
Toast mochi until puffed.
Cut vegetables and kamaboko into 1/4 inch slices, then blanch vegetables in boiling water.
Place one or two mochi in each bowl, garnish with kamboko and vegetables, then pour soup on top.
-Elliott Brooks
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