Okano-Eisen Yanaka
Mame Daifuku in Old Yanaka
A 1900 wagashi shop in Yanaka where locals time their walks around fresh mame daifuku and the ginger-scented signature sweet called Ukikusa.
Last verified: April 2026
Why Japanese People Love It
Yanaka Okano-Eisen has been part of the neighborhood since 1900, and locals still use it the way they always have: as a small but dependable stop during a morning walk through old shitamachi Tokyo. The appeal is not variety for its own sake. It is a short lineup of sweets done with the confidence of repetition.
The best-known item is mame daifuku. People come because the balance is right: soft mochi, clear bean flavor, and sweetness held back just enough to keep you reaching for the next bite instead of feeling finished after one.
The second reason people remember the shop is its atmosphere. The storefront still reads as old Yanaka rather than curated retro. That matters in a part of Tokyo where the texture of the street is half the reason to go.
How to Experience It
This is a walk-in wagashi shop, not a sit-down café. Go early in the day, choose what you want at the counter, and plan to eat it as part of your walk rather than as a full seated stop.
The shop can close earlier than posted once the popular items sell out, so late morning is the safest window. Weekends in Yanaka bring more foot traffic, which makes early arrival even more useful.
There is no English support to rely on, but the visit is simple enough that you can point, nod, and be fine. If you want just one signature item, ask for mame daifuku.
Because these are fresh traditional sweets, buy only what you plan to eat soon. The point is their same-day texture, not keeping them around until later in the trip.
What to Order
Mame Daifuku (豆大福) — The house classic. Soft mochi with whole beans worked into the dough and sweet bean paste inside. This is the item most closely tied to the shop's reputation.
Ukikusa (浮草) — A signature sweet with a gentle ginger note in the outer layer and azuki inside. It is the best second order if you want something specific to this shop rather than a standard Tokyo wagashi type.
Seasonal wagashi — Check what is available that day. Part of the pleasure of old neighborhood sweet shops is seeing what has been made for the season rather than ordering from a fixed menu.
Plan your visit
| Area | Yanaka |
|---|---|
| Category | Cultural Experiences |
| Price range | ¥200-800 |
| Hours | 9:30-17:00 (closes earlier when sold out) |
| Closed | Mondays & Wednesdays |
| Access | 7 min walk from Nippori Station South Exit (JR) |
| Reservations | Walk-in only |
| English menu | ✕ None No — Japanese menu |
| English support | None |
| Last verified | April 2026 |
Nearby Experiences
Pair the stop with a slow loop through Yanaka Cemetery, the older lanes of Uenosakuragi, or a coffee break at Kayaba before the neighborhood gets crowded. This is one of those Tokyo mornings that works best without rushing from one headline sight to the next.