The Endangered Snack: Why Real Norimaki Senbei is Disappearing from Everyday Life.

A Doraemon (ドラえもん) figure turning its back on a plate with separated Japanese rice crackers and seaweed. This illustration symbolizes the mystery of the disappearing Norimaki Senbei (のりまきせんべい).

In a previous article, I mentioned “Dr. Slump’s Norimaki Senbei” so I wanted to write an article about Norimaki Senbei (seaweed-wrapped version of japan’s savory umami rice snacks), and went out to buy some, but I was shocked 😧

I visited several supermarkets and drugstores, but I couldn’t find them anywhere!

A wide selection of over ten types of Japanese rice crackers on a supermarket shelf, but notably missing any seaweed-wrapped Norimaki Senbei.
So many choices, yet the one I’m looking for is nowhere to be found.

All I could find were Norimaki Arare. Even then, the selection was tiny—maybe only two types per store. (If you’re wondering about the difference between Senbei and Arare, I’ve explained it in a previous article, so be sure to check that out first!)

This is truly surprising because the seaweed-wrapped cracker is the ultimate icon of Japanese senbei. Just look at the emoji: 🍘. That’s a Norimaki Senbei!
If you asked a Japanese person to draw a senbei, most would draw exactly that.

I thought maybe it was just my local stores, so I checked the websites of major rice cracker manufacturers. To my horror, the Norimaki Senbei lineups were almost gone! 😧
Products I used to see all the time have been discontinued…

Why has Norimaki Senbei become an endangered species? I explored the reasons 🤔

Reason 1: The Skyrocketing Price of Seaweed (Nori)

Nori is essential to the Japanese diet—it’s in sushi 🍣, onigiri 🍙, you name it. But in the last two or three years, the price has been soaring.
As of 2026, the price is nearly double what it used to be!!

A plate of nine pieces of sushi with arrows pointing to the nori-wrapped pieces, illustrating how seaweed acts as a crucial "flavor switcher" in a complete set.
Nori is the ultimate “flavor switcher.” Adding seaweed-wrapped pieces to a set of sushi prevents flavor fatigue and takes the entire dining experience to the next level.

Poor seaweed harvest in Japan

This is largely due to record-breaking poor harvests caused by rising sea temperatures and changes in the marine ecosystem, along with surging raw material and logistics costs 🌊

The Global Competition for Nori

You might think, “Don’t manufacturers use cheaper imported Nori from countries like Korea?” Yes, they often do. However, the situation isn’t that simple.

According to data from the Japanese and South Korean fishery industries, Nori prices have hit record highs globally. This is driven by the massive “Global Sushi & Nori Snack Boom.” 🍣🍘

As demand increases worldwide, countries are now in a “tug-of-war” over high-quality Nori.

Cinnamoroll and Kuromi each holding onto nori seaweed, representing the global competition for nori, while Kirby watches them from the background.
Cinnamoroll and Kuromi think they’ve won, but they forgot about the hungriest black hole in the room: Kirby.

When Japanese production fails, the competition for imported Nori intensifies, driving up global prices for everyone.

—Since Norimaki Senbei uses a generous amount of high-quality nori 🍘, this is likely a major reason for its disappearance.

Reason 2: Price Hikes and Abundant Alternatives

With nori prices rising, Norimaki Senbei naturally becomes more expensive 💰

By the way, it’s not just the seaweed. Over the last few years, the price of Japanese rice—the main ingredient of all senbei—has also increased by about 1.5 to 2.0 times 🍚💦

While almost all food items in Japan are seeing price hikes, this “double punch” of expensive rice and skyrocketing Nori has made the traditional Norimaki Senbei a very difficult product for manufacturers to maintain.

Doraemon smiling blissfully at raw rice and nori, unaware of the "double punch" of rising prices hitting the rice cracker industry.
Ignorance is bliss: Doraemon smiles while makers struggle with the soaring costs of rice and nori.

Looking at the supermarket shelves, there are over 30 types of crackers to choose from. When faced with so many options, fewer people choose the slightly pricier Norimaki version 🍘

As a result, major manufacturers stop producing them, pushing the species further toward extinction.
(While smaller manufacturers and specialty shops in department stores still sell them, the variety is still quite limited.)

—To be honest, I wasn’t a “hardcore” fan of Norimaki Senbei myself, so I never actively looked for them.
It wasn’t until I started researching them to write a Norimaki Senbei’s review that I realized they’d disappeared 💦
I took their existence for granted, only to realize they were gone before I knew it…

—It’s a strange feeling of loss, isn’t it?
Like when you realize a shop you visited as a child has quietly vanished without you noticing 😢

A row of green and white glass beads with a gap, featuring Doraemon in the shadows looking at the missing piece with light shining from the top left.
How did I ever forget something that once shone so brightly? By the time I noticed, it was already gone.

I can almost hear the Norimaki Senbei saying, “You never even cared about me until now!” Yeah… I’m sorry, Norimaki Senbei. I was selfish.

But the story doesn’t end here.

“If there is no Norimaki Senbei left in the world, why not just make it myself?” 👸🍰

Check out “The Norimaki Senbei Revenge: DIY Edition!” As a National Cooking License holder, I took matters into my own hands 🕺✨ Which cracker became the ultimate partner for my seaweed? Find out now!

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