In Taiwan, a traditional Hakka and Hoklo pounded rice cake was called
teuchi or
tauchi () and came in various styles and forms just like in Japan. Traditional Hakka mochi is served as glutinous rice dough, covered with peanuts (粢粑;
zī bā) or sesame powder. A soft version similar to , often coming with bean paste fillings, is called () in
Taiwanese Hokkien and () in
Taiwanese Mandarin. In
China, is made from glutinous rice flour mixed with a small amount of water to form balls and is then cooked and served in boiling water. is typically filled with
black sesame paste or
peanut paste and served in the water that it was boiled in. In
Hong Kong and other
Cantonese regions, the traditional () is made of glutinous rice flour in the shape of a ball, with fillings such as crushed peanuts, coconut, red bean paste, and black sesame paste. It can come in a variety of modern flavors, such as green tea, mango, taro, strawberry, and more. In
Philippines, a traditional Filipino sweet snack similar to Japanese mochi is called (). There is also another delicacy called
espasol with a taste similar to Japanese , though made with roasted rice flour (not , roasted soy flour). The Philippines also has several steamed rice snacks with very similar names to mochi, including , , and . These are small steamed rice balls with bean paste or peanut fillings. However, they are not derived from the Japanese mochi but are derivatives of the Chinese (called in the Philippines). They are also made with the native process, which mixes ground, slightly fermented cooked
glutinous rice with
coconut milk. In
Korea, (
Hangul: ) varieties are made of steamed glutinous rice or steamed glutinous rice flour. In
Indonesia, is usually filled with sweet bean paste and covered with
sesame seeds. comes from
Sukabumi,
West Java and
Semarang,
Central Java. Another Indonesian mochi is
yangko, a
Yogyakarta mochi made from glutinuous rice. In
Pontianak, mochi is covered with ground peanut powder and the dish named
kaloci. In
Malaysia, is made from glutinous rice flour and filled with coconut filling and
palm sugar. Another
Chinese Malaysian variant, is made with the same ingredients, but their fillings are filled with crushed peanuts. There is also , which has similar ingredients and texture to mochi but the size is larger. The snack is quite popular in the east coast of Malaysia. In
Singapore, is made from glutinous rice flour and is usually coated with either crushed peanuts or black sesame seeds. In
Hawaii, a dessert variety called "
butter mochi" is made with mochiko, butter, sugar, coconut, and other ingredients and then baked to make a sponge cake of sorts. ==See also ==