The Fragrant Blade of Hospitality

Oct 20, 2025

wood toothpicks, wood, kuromoji yoji

「EP.82」 黒文字楊枝

KUROMOJI YOJI
nationwide

「transcript」

Before becoming the elegant tool for wagashi in tea ceremonies, the yoji began in India as ha-gi, tooth-cleaning sticks tied to Buddhist cleansing practices. These spread through China and Korea before arriving in Japan, where they became both everyday toothpicks and ceremonial tools.

By the Edo period, warriors often crafted them as a side pursuit, shaving branches of the kuromoji tree by hand. The wood, from the camphor family, is valued for its strength, smooth cut, and refreshing citrus-like aroma, with natural oils that add antibacterial qualities.

Legend says tea master Furuta Oribe snapped a branch from his garden hedge to fashion a yoji, marking its entry into tea ceremonies. From then, kuromoji became the material of choice for wagashi utensils, its fragrance enhancing the tea room atmosphere.

Today, kuromoji yoji are still hand-cut, shaped into fine triangular points while keeping part of the bark for aroma and beauty. Whether made in Chiba’s Ujō Yoji tradition or Edo’s long-standing shops like Nihonbashi’s Saruya, the process remains rooted in patience and skill.

*The assets featured here are the work of their rightful creators, credited below

「sources & assets」

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pgulis7mS6E

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8pmo2XRE6D8

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JgBmh8fDzsE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9alpuSNPV8

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a5HFN7iRbeo

https://www.wagashi-issho.com/column/01/01/

https://aromato.co.jp/history/

https://www.chuoku-machikadotenjikan.jp/feature/special07_tenjikan02.html

https://trone.jp/staffblog/黒文字について/

https://senshodohori.com/link-youji/youji.html

https://www.nihonbashi-saruya.co.jp/quality/kodawari2/

https://www.city.kimitsu.lg.jp/site/kanko/2170.html

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