Fuso, Aichi
Morningside fields in the Nōbi Plain still grow Moriadaikōn — the long, slender radish that accounts for a dominant share of national production, most of it destined to become Moritsuke-zuke, the amber-colored pickled preserve associated with Nagoya cuisine. The fields run flat and uninterrupted, reflecting the geography of the Kiso River's alluvial fan whose apex sits close to Fuso itself. Mulberry groves once covered much of this same ground during the Edo period, feeding silkworms in farmhouses like the Kawata Family Residence, a merchant building relocated here in 1917 and converted for agricultural use, its silk-rearing loft still intact as a registered tangible cultural property.
The town's civic architecture carries a certain quiet seriousness. The Fuso Bunka Kaikan opened in 1995 with a permanent hanamichi runway built into its auditorium — a detail that signals genuine commitment to kabuki rather than occasional accommodation of it. Nearby, Shōgakuji temple holds a set of twelve divine generals carved by the itinerant sculptor Enkū, figures rough-hewn and direct in the way Enkū's work always is. Kakuōji, founded in the fourteenth century, has five structures registered as tangible cultural properties, its Rinzai compound sitting quietly among residential streets.
Three stations on the Meitetsu Inuyama Line thread through the town, placing Nagoya within half an hour. Fuso functions as a commuter settlement, but the daikon fields and the old levee along the Kiso River — the Okakoitei, built in the early seventeenth century — give the land a longer memory than its postwar housing suggests.