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If sorcery exists in this world, I'm pretty sure Japan has already discovered it. They can't quite turn water into wine but they can turn it into dessert. That water droplet you see above? It's actually a rice cake dessert, or shingen mochi, that melts in your mouth as you eat it. It's like eating a delicate water balloon that can pop at any second for dessert. Only way more delicious.

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Supposedly, the water drop dessert mochi—mizu shingen mochi—is refreshingly cool and tasty. The water in the droplet comes from the Japanese Alps and the texture is extremely delicate. Here's what the dessert looks like when it's served, supposedly it disintegrates after 30 minutes:

 

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Due to its frailty, however, the water cake can only be enjoyed in-store at one of two Kinseiken shops in Japan. Guess the rest of us will just have to stick to this:

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