🍡🐱Use Code "PAPAJUN" and get your limited edition, one-of-a-kind Jun's Cat Candy with your first #Sakuraco box today! team.sakura.co/junskitchen-SC2408 🌙Use Code "JUN" to get $5 off your #Sakuraco box team.sakura.co/junskitchen-SC2408 . Experience Japan from the comfort of your own home!
Before Jun asked I was thinking, "Every day is arm day for these guys!! We got some Papabubble candy in our Sakuraco September box! Not Jun's cats, alas, but moon bunnies and dango for Tsukimi season. So cute!~ If you can afford a Sakuraco subscription my partner and I totally recommend it. We set aside an afternoon each week to have tea, share sweets, and talk about light-hearted things - it's become a special time for us.
the final layer wrapping being the perfect size to wrap around all the kitties is amazing. I don't know if they measured it or just know it by heart but being able to make it so perfect was mesmerizing
Sagrada Familia -- are you KIDDING me?!? What an absolute badass. Thanks so much for your videos, Jun. Side note, your tote bag is the best bag I've ever had and I've loved and used it for years.
I watch channels like Lofty Pursuits, which makes this kind of candy in Florida, and it's really interesting to see the subtle differences in technique used at this store!
Oh it’d be such fun if Gregg from @loftypursuits could come and tour these Japanese candy shops and factories. It would be a great exchange of knowledge and information
This video brought tears, happy tears. The staff at Papabubble speak from the heart, it's so nice amidst everything which happens in life. I want to continue working towards trying to visit Japan next year.
I've seen Lofty Pursuits candy making in Florida, it is so cool seeing another candy makers craft at work. So much skill and strength and care around the candy when it's still piping hot! Wonderful video, thank you so much for filming and sharing this with your viewers.
That was AMAZING! I had no idea that such things were made by hand, like millefleurs glass, but with even more detail! So wonderful that such a craft is still being maintained today. We need more that's analog in this increasingly digital world. Many thanks to Jun, Papabubble and Sakura for sharing this with us!
Thank you for the video ! It brought back good old memories =) In France we have a lots of candy shops like that. But most of them don't do the demostration directly in the store. You have to ask the store if they do demonstrations and most of the time there is a charge. I remember witnessing the making of candy like this when I was about 8 years old for a school trip. I still remember the flavour of the incredible lemon-flavoured berlingos they made ! =) Where I currently live, the culinary specialty of my city is to make sweets with wood violet (the flower) flavour =)
i just, LOVEEEE how the employees are so sweet and nice, they seem amazing, they make me wanna go to japan visit their store even though my Japanese is SO BAD
I’ve seen a papa bubble somewhere in Tokyo in a busy area, and watched them pull the candy into smaller rods!! It was so cool, but even cooler to see the process for these cute cat candies!!
I've seen this kind of candy made so many times by so many RU-vid channels and in person, and yet it never fails to dazzle me. It's so amazing how they can take strips of sweetness and form them into an image.
amazing how just from stretching the massive chunk of candy youre able to get it so small while keeping about 100% of the detail also in general that theyre able to by hand make tiny candies with precise sharp japanese letters
Very impressed with skill level at such a young age :) well done Papabubble crew :) and Jun for showing us how it's done of course you appreciate doing such artistry as you do the same :)
Their precision is crazy impressive! Just how consistent each stretch of candy is, or how perfectly the colored exterior wraps around the white core at the right size, you can see the insane amount of hours of experience
That candy looks absolutely beautiful! I love seeing these candy-making videos, learning about some that may be unique to Japan but also seeing familiar styles like these candies. Here in England, seaside towns are known for their candy like this - but usually sold as longer sticks rather than cut into bite-sized pieces, known as sticks of rock. And there's a US-based RU-vid channel which is primarily about this style of candy, the channel is called Lofty Pursuits. It's so neat to see multiple countries'/cultures' takes on the same core idea!
My mouth was :O throughout most of the video and going "woaah." It is so amazing to see these candy crafts people work with such mastery and technical precision! Also, one of them has an especially cute smile xD!
These workers are amazing and so are you, Jun! I'm so impressed with the quality of your craftsmen videos and the skill that these people display. They're all so charismatic and kind. Incredible as always! I hope you continue to get the chance to show the dedication it takes to make such delicious treats.
Love this kind of videos. You can tell the candy makers enjoy the interaction and are really proud of their work, that also speaks volumes of the company itself. I hope at some point sakuraco decides to make a documentary with Jun or at least edit all the videos to make them in a longer format because they could be easily used to promote Japan. At least a QR code linking to jun's video featuring the candy company that is in the box and including its product, they are already doing the design of the booklet, so would be a super plus to get to know the company in a deeper level. Keep coming with more amazing videos, greetings from México 😊
I love watching candy making videos. The art and skill it takes to make those designs blows me away. These videos bring a smile to my face just like candy does :)
Your videos feel genuine enough to make you the only creator I'd watch through each sponsored part.. that aside, impressive display of handcraftship, inspiring even! Nice video!
Awesome video, really interesting to see how much work actually goes into every single candy. Sadly my Japan vacation ended last week, would have loved to visit them :D
The last time I visited Japan I went to Ghibli Museum and bought a bottle of these sweets. I didn't expected it taste so good I might consider it one of the best sweets I've ever tried.
I've seen videos where people make candy like this before! It seems pretty common in America when you see people making hard candies. They also make candy canes and peppermints in a similar manner.
That was AMAZING! I watched them make your three-cat-candy and realized my mouth was hanging open-- I've been wondering for years if it was something like how Venetian millefiori glass is made, and it is (but much more delicious!) Thank you so much for doing this, and that gift for Rachel was adorable.
YEAH!!! I have been waiting for another tour!!! Thank you !! Thats a lot like we do Clay canes. But you can eat their, can't eat ours lol Such talent!!