Bread and Confectionery Manufacturing Workers X Personality Traits: Meticulous

122 matching jobs found.

Bread and Confectionery Maker

A profession that mixes raw materials such as flour and sugar, performs fermentation, shaping, baking, and finishing to mass-produce or handcraft bread and confectionery.

Bread and Confectionery Craftsman

A craftsman who uses raw materials such as flour, eggs, and sugar to perform dough preparation, baking, and finishing for bread and Western confectionery.

Jelly Manufacturing Worker

A factory worker who manufactures jelly desserts using raw materials such as gelatin and agar through processes of heating, blending, and cooling, and performs tasks from quality inspection to packaging.

Rice Cracker Seasoning Worker

Manufacturing line worker who evenly applies seasonings such as soy sauce or sugar to rice crackers, dries and bakes them to add flavor.

Senbei Dough Manufacturing Worker

A profession that manufactures dough for senbei using rice flour and starch as the main ingredients.

Senbei Manufacturing Worker

This occupation handles the entire manufacturing process for rice crackers (senbei), from raw material mixing to forming, baking, seasoning, and packaging. Machine operation, quality control, and hygiene management are required.

Daifuku Manufacturing Worker

Daifuku manufacturing workers use glutinous rice flour or glutinous rice as raw materials to make mochi dough, wrap it with anko, and produce daifuku mochi. They handle forming, wrapping with anko, and packaging on production lines or by hand, and are responsible for quality and hygiene management.

Daifuku Manufacturing Worker

A profession that manufactures daifuku by wrapping anko in mochi and handling molding, steaming, and finishing in an integrated process.

Daifuku Mochi Maker

Artisan who manufactures daifuku mochi from glutinous rice. Handles processes such as steaming, pounding, kneading, molding, and anko wrapping to provide high-quality daifuku.

Taiyaki Maker

A profession that manufactures taiyaki by pouring batter based on wheat flour into iron plates or special molds, sandwiching anko, and baking it.