Kenpi


Kenpi or Imo-kenpi is
a snack food and common omiyage/meibutsu from Kōchi Prefecture, Japan.
They are strips of candied sweet potato, resembling french fries in appearance, but are hard and sugary sweet in taste.
Now, in Japan, almost all super markets and convenience stores sell kenpi of their own brands. You can get kenpi everywhere. And one Japanese manga describes kenpi as an aphrodisiac. A phrase, "You have kenpi in your hair." became famous in SNS.
Kenpi is made from 1 cm strips of raw sweet potato that is fried in 160 degree C oil until golden brown and most of the moisture has been extracted from the sweet potato, leaving the cooled product crisp. The strips are drained of excess oil. A sugar glaze is made of granular sugar, a trace of salt for flavor, and water that is heated to just short of the hard ball stage over medium-low heat and then poured over the fried sweet potatoes. The strips are then separated, placed on a rack, and allowed to drain of any excess sugar until cool. The sugar sauce typically sugars as it glazes due to having been disturbed while hot or due to introduction of sugar crystals while cooling. Because of the high sugar content, once cooled, the kenpi must be immediately stored in sealed bags or containers to maintain crispness.
Variations include different varieties of sweet potatoes, inclusion of the skin, different amounts of salt in the sugar mixture, different additional flavorings, and different sugar sauce preparation methodologies. Because any sugar sauce can be caramelized, any variety of already established caramel flavoring methods can also be used providing that a hard glaze is still attained. Thus in theory, a peel on, gingered, caramelled, brandy flavored kenpi should be attainable.