Your first Japanese bakery visit involves a vocabulary lesson conducted through glass. Everything looks soft, golden and slightly mysterious. This glossary decodes the case — what each item is, how to eat it, and which ones to try first.
The Sweet Buns菓子パン
Kurīmupan is the custard cream bun — soft, glossy, generously filled. Anpan holds sweet red bean. Melonpan wears a crackled cookie crust (no melon involved). Shokupan is the tall white milk bread, sold by the loaf and judged by softness. Start with the cream bun; it is the genre's ambassador.
The Fried Department揚げ物
Kare pan is curry sealed in dough and fried — eat it warm. Korokke is the panko croquette, usually potato and minced pork, creamy inside and crisp outside. Menchi katsu is a fried minced-meat patty, found solo or in sandwiches. All three are lunch masquerading as pastry.
The Cream Puff Familyシュー一族
Shu cream is the custard-filled choux puff; mini choux are its one-bite form; choux pie adds flaky layers; eclairs run the same idea long and chocolate-glazed. For the full theory, read our custard explainer.
The Savory Breads惣菜パン
Mentaiko pan carries spicy cod-roe butter. Ham and cheese buns, corn mayo rolls, and sausage breads round out the everyday savory shelf. None need utensils; all were designed for commutes.
A Sensible First Order最初の注文
One cream bun, one kare pan or korokke, one shu cream, plus the shop's signature — at Custard Nakamura near BTS Phrom Phong, that means the custard pudding. Roughly ฿250 total, and you will have covered the entire curriculum.
Bakery Etiquette, Brieflyマナー
Take a tray and tongs where provided, don't squeeze the bread, and buy what you touch. Items sell out by design — see it as the freshest possible recommendation engine.
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