Materia primaIngredientes alimentarios

Kinako (Roasted Soybean Flour)

きな粉 (Kinako)

Por qué hacer sourcing en Japón

Sourced from Nationwide; specialty origins in Hokkaidō, Kyoto with year-round Japanese supply, consistent quality, and traceability to the prefecture of origin.

Spec clave

MOQ from 50–200 kg.

Producto final típico

Wagashi coating and inclusion (warabi-mochi, dango, daifuku) — Authentic Japanese coating powder, often paired with kuromitsu (black-sugar syrup) for premium wagashi gift sets and café desserts.

Resumen

Proveedores listados
2 proveedores
MOQ típico
50–200 kg
Plazo típico
3–6 semanas
Regiones de origen
Nationwide; specialty origins in Hokkaidō, Kyoto
Categoría
Ingredientes alimentarios
Temporada de cosecha
Todo el año (a partir de soja seca)
Estado regulatorio en Japón
Food Sanitation Act
Nombre japonés
きな粉
Romaji
Kinako

Sobre este ingrediente

El kinako es harina de soja tostada, elaborada tostando en seco habas de soja enteras y moliéndolas hasta obtener un polvo fino. Un clásico de la confitería japonesa, se utiliza habitualmente para cubrir mochi, wagashi y preparaciones tradicionales de Año Nuevo. Las aplicaciones industriales incluyen toppings de repostería, ingrediente para barritas nutricionales y aplicaciones en alimentos funcionales.

Estado regulatorio

JapónFood Sanitation Act
Unión EuropeaImportación alimentaria
Estados UnidosFDA
ChinaVerificar

Preguntas frecuentes para compradores OEM

Q. What is the typical MOQ and lead time for kinako?

Industry-typical MOQ for kinako is 50–200 kg per delivery with 3–6 week lead times for standard yellow-bean SKUs. Hokkaido-origin or specific cultivar (e.g., Tsurunoko, Toyomasari) lots, organic certification, and non-GMO IP-handled lots add 2–4 weeks and lift unit cost.

Fuentes · Última revisión: 2026-04-26

Conocimiento del sector — aún no anclado en una única fuente primaria

Q. Can I source non-GMO, domestic-Japan-grown kinako?

Yes. Hokkaido is Japan's largest domestic soybean producer, and Hokkaido-origin kinako with non-GMO identity-preserved certification is widely available, though pricing can be 2–3x imported (US, Canada) raw soybean kinako. Confirm '国産大豆 100%' (100% domestic soybean) and IP handling certificate. Kyoto specialty producers also supply premium kinako with documented domestic origin.

Fuentes · Última revisión: 2026-04-26

Q. What COA parameters and certifications should I request?

Standard COA parameters: protein, fat, moisture (≤8% for shelf stability), ash, particle size distribution (typical 100–200 mesh), peroxide value (oxidation indicator — important for shelf life), microbiological limits, heavy metals, and aflatoxin (B1 + total) given soybean susceptibility. Certifications to consider: non-GMO IP, JAS organic, kosher, halal — these are commonly available from major suppliers.

Fuentes · Última revisión: 2026-04-26

Q. What shelf life can I expect, and how should kinako be packaged for export?

Kinako shelf life is typically 6–12 months from production when stored sealed at room temperature, limited primarily by lipid oxidation (the roasted bean oils oxidize). For export, request nitrogen-flushed multi-layer foil bags (5–10 kg), or vacuum-packed inner bags inside cartons. Cold-chain storage extends stability significantly; specify maximum cumulative heat exposure on the supply contract for tropical destinations.

Fuentes · Última revisión: 2026-04-26

Conocimiento del sector — aún no anclado en una única fuente primaria

Casos de uso

  • Wagashi coating and inclusion (warabi-mochi, dango, daifuku)

    Posicionamiento
    Authentic Japanese coating powder, often paired with kuromitsu (black-sugar syrup) for premium wagashi gift sets and café desserts.
    Nivel de uso típico
    Coating: 10–25% of finished product weight; the powder is dusted on the cooled mochi surface.
  • Plant-protein bars and breakfast cereals

    Posicionamiento
    Japanese-style plant-protein flavor and natural roasted aroma for vegan / vegetarian protein bar lines.
    Nivel de uso típico
    5–15% of bar formulation; provides protein, fiber, and a 'roasted nutty' note without nut allergens (note: soy is itself an allergen).
  • Kinako latte and beverage powders

    Posicionamiento
    Plant-based latte category — 'Japanese soybean latte' as a stand-alone flavor or alternative to nut-milk lattes.
    Nivel de uso típico
    8–15 g kinako per 200 mL serving when pre-blended with sugar and milk powder.
    Notas de formulación
    Disperses better with light agitation in warm milk; combine with a small percentage of soy lecithin for instant cold-water solubility.

    Fuentes

    Conocimiento del sector — aún no anclado en una única fuente primaria

  • Ice cream, gelato, and frozen-dessert flavoring

    Posicionamiento
    Japanese-style 'kinako' premium flavor SKU within Asian-fusion gelato ranges.
    Nivel de uso típico
    3–6% kinako on the white mix, often paired with kuromitsu ripple.

    Fuentes

    Conocimiento del sector — aún no anclado en una única fuente primaria

Proveedores japoneses

Consultar sobre Kinako (Roasted Soybean Flour)