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How To Make Japanese Cream Sandwiches At Home

I don’t know about you, but my for-you-page is always flooded with foods I can’t try, which is devastating. One in particular that I can’t get out of my head is the Japanese deep-fried cream sando. I’ve had deep fried pickles and deep fried Oreos (both rather unique experiences), and I’m a huge lover of funnel cake, so a deep fried sandwich sounds right up my alley. But of course, these sandwiches are not easy to get, generally found in Japan or in a few Japanese restaurants around the US. Which I am not close to. Luckily, some TikTok users have had the same plight and have made their own deep-fried cream sandos at home. If you’re as eager to try the sandwich as I am, here’s how to make them for yourself (spoiler alert: it’s not that hard).

What are Japanese cream sandos?

If you haven’t seen these sandwiches before, allow me to ruin your life. The cream sando, a popular Japanese street snack, is a sandwich made with milk bread (called Shokupan) and stuffed with whipped cream — they may also come topped with fruit like strawberries.

These sound delightful on their own, but these sandwiches can also come deep fried, which is what I’m most interested in. I’ve seen a few complaints about how oily the bread is, but others say that the crunchy bread pairs great with the soft, slightly sweet cream filling and potential bright toppings. Honestly, the debate only makes me want to try the snack more.

How can you make cream sandos at home?

Since I can’t take a quick trip to Japan and am nowhere near some of the places in the US that serve these sandwiches, I figured there has to be a way to make these at home. And thanks to the great foodie engineers of the internet, there is. There’s actually more than one way, too.

@eatsbyrachel

Save yourself a flight to Japan 🇯🇵 by making viral deep fried cream sandos at home! But let’s be honest…you should still go to Japan. Ingredients 1 loaf sliced Japanese milk bread 1 1/2 cups vegetable oil 1 cup heavy cream 1/2 cup sugar 1 tsp vanilla extract 4 strawberries, sliced 2 tsp matcha powder 3 drops ube extract Sweet potato powder for dusting Matcha powder for dusting Recipe 1. Fry milk bread in hot oil until golden and crispy. Drain on paper towels. 2. Slice diagonally, then carefully carve out the center. 3. Whip heavy cream, sugar, and vanilla to stiff peaks. Divide into 3 bowls. Fold 2 tsp matcha into one bowl and 3 drops of ube extract into another. 4. Stuff each slice of bread with cream using a spatula. 5. Top plain cream with strawberries. 6. Dust matcha cream with matcha powder. 7. Dust ube cream with sweet potato powder. 8. Enjoy + try not to eat them all at once 😮‍💨 #japan #japanesefood #cream #sando #deepfried

♬ Sugar Rush – COZY CLOU:D

To start, you’re going to need a loaf of milk bread. I’ve found milk bread at some of my local bakeries or even cafes and Asian marts. If you have a Paris Baguette near you, they generally have milk bread. Cut yourself a thick slice (you need room for stuffing) and then fill a pan with 1 1/2 cups of vegetable oil. Fry up your slice until it’s “golden and crispy.” You’re probably going to want to dab extra oil off the bread with paper towels before cutting the bread diagonally. Then, create a slit in the bread to create a hollow pocket. 

You can fill this pocket with pre-made whipped cream, but making your own is going to taste fresher because unfortunately, putting in effort does result in better foods. Making the whip isn’t too hard — @eatsbyrachel recommends whipping 1 cup of heavy cream, 1 tsp of vanilla, and a ½ cup of sugar together until you get stiff peaks. Meaning if you take your whisk out, the cream makes a firmly shaped peak that doesn’t drip or move. If you want, you can flavor your whipped cream as well. 

To finish, stuff the pocket with your choice of whipped cream, using a spatula to smooth over the top. You could just eat it then, or you can top with sliced strawberries, a dusting of matcha, or anything else your stomach desires. 

How to make cream sandos using the air-fryer

Now, if you’re scared of frying oil in your house (valid), one TikTok user, @linder_surprise, found a way to make them in the air fryer. Instead of deep frying, you can coat your milk bread in oil and air fry them. Then proceed like you would if you had fried them.

@linder_surprise

it was either make this or spend $2k to fly to Japan! I’m so good at saving $$ lol 🙃 // these matcha pandan Japanese cream sandwiches are SOOOOO GOOOD THO OMFGG #japanesefood #creamsandwich #japaneats #matcha #pandan

♬ original sound – Linda

Now, excuse me while I run around to my local shops to look for some milk bread — I’ve waited long enough to try these deep fried cream sandos as it is.

Sarah Leberknight was the Fall 2025 Spoon Editorial Intern, and has been writing for the National Writer Program since 2024. She covers food on all fronts, hoping to write articles that make you hungry for a snack, and loves to tackle divisive opinions on your favorite foods.

Sarah is a senior at Virginia Tech, where she juggles 3 majors—English Literature, Creative Writing, and Professional and Technical Writing. She writes for VT’s Collegiate Times newspaper as an opinions columnist, spouting her thoughts on women’s soccer, college, and anything else she has a say on. Her work has also appeared in VT News and Trill Mag, where she interned for 6 months as an entertainment writer and is now interning as an editor. She previously interned at Sneak Peek Books as a book reviewer.

When Sarah’s not writing professionally or for school, she’s still writing. Short stories, a novel trilogy, and novellas—she does it all. Except poems. And if she actually isn’t writing, she’s playing video games or watching other people play video games. She can’t get enough of the Legend of Zelda.