thumb|right|260px|Children doing katanuki Katanuki ( or ), literally diecutting, is an activity common at Japanese festivals in which a coloured mold of candy made of wheat flour, starch, or sugar, is carved using a needle or toothpick in the shape of an animal, star, a cherry blossom, etc. Those who are able to skillfully carve the mold receive a prize.
thumb|right|260px|Children doing katanuki Katanuki ( or ), literally diecutting, is an activity common at Japanese festivals in which a coloured mold of candy made of wheat flour, starch, or sugar, is carved using a needle or toothpick in the shape of an animal, star, a cherry blossom, etc. Those who are able to skillfully carve the mold receive a prize.
== Overview == The official name for katanuki is , but it is commonly called or simply . Although it is called diecut candy, it is not made for the purpose of eating. The raw materials are indeed foodstuffs, but because it is not distributed as food, and because it is a health hazard to consume and is not particularly appetizing, it is generally not eaten.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).