Taiwa, Miyagi
Along the old Oshu Kaido highway, the town of Taiwa grew where routes diverged — one road north, another branching toward the interior. That history still has weight here. The shrine at Yoshioka Hachimangu, which served as the tutelary center of the castle town, is where Shimada Ame is said to have originated: a candy tied to a festival bearing the same name, sold and eaten in a context of ritual rather than tourism. The merchant house Kokutaya, whose founder once extended a substantial loan to the domain in an act of civic courage, still operates — selling Nanatsu-mori no Shiki, a junmai sake brewed under that same name, connecting the shop's Edo-period origins to something you can hold in a bottle today.
The landscape north of Sendai is wooded and unhurried, the Yoshida River threading through it. Near the base of Mt. Funagatayama, spring water at Kazahayatoge draws people from inside and outside the town to fill containers quietly, without ceremony. At the Daigamori-yaki Nanatsu-mori Ceramics Workshop, the tradition of pottery from a district once known as a gathering of kilns continues in hands-on form. These are not reconstructed attractions but working continuations of local practice.
What the town runs on now is less visible but pervasive: manufacturing facilities, rice wholesaling, a residential population that commutes toward Sendai. The older fabric — the post-town layout, the sake house, the festival calendar that includes Bonden Bayai and Yabusame — persists alongside apartment blocks and industrial roads, neither dominant nor erased.