Japan (nationwide; Kyoto and Akita as historic koji culture centres)
Kome-koji — rice inoculated with Aspergillus oryzae mould and incubated at 28–32°C for 48–52 hours — is arguably the most consequential single ingredient in Japanese fermentation culture, serving as the biological engine of sake brewing, miso production, soy sauce making, mirin production, sake lees (kasu), and amazake. The mould secretes protease, amylase, and lipase enzymes that break down rice starches into sugars, proteins into amino acids (umami), and fats into fatty acids — creating the nutrient-rich medium that subsequent yeasts and bacteria use to produce alcohol, acidity, and complex flavour compounds. Understanding koji production is foundational to understanding why Japanese fermented foods taste as they do. Home koji production requires: steamed short-grain rice, koji starter spores (tane-koji), an incubation environment at 28–32°C with high humidity (70–80%), and 48 hours of patient monitoring. At the 30-hour mark, the rice should be lightly covered in white mycelium; by 48 hours, the characteristic sweet chestnut-like aroma (koji fragrance) should be unmistakable. The rice should be warm to the touch from metabolic heat — evidence of active enzyme production. The koji is ready when mycelium has penetrated to the centre of each grain without browning. Freshly made kome-koji can be used immediately for shio-koji (salt-koji marinade), amazake, or as a starter culture for miso. Dried and stored koji loses enzymatic activity over time — fresh koji is always superior for direct applications.
Sweet chestnut aroma — rich enzymatic complexity that drives flavour transformation in everything it touches
{"Aspergillus oryzae secretes amylase, protease, lipase — three enzyme classes enabling all Japanese fermentation","Incubation: 28–32°C, 70–80% humidity, 48–52 hours — temperature management is critical","White mycelium without browning indicates success; sweet chestnut fragrance confirms enzymatic activity","Metabolic heat from koji activity warms the rice — normal and desirable","Kome-koji is the biological foundation of sake, miso, soy sauce, mirin, and amazake"}
{"Shio-koji (salt-koji): 10g salt per 100g fresh kome-koji, stir daily for 7–10 days — universal marinade","Koji fragrance test: properly matured kome-koji smells of sweet chestnuts or rice wine; any other smell indicates contamination","For best results use a seedling germination tray with temperature controller for consistent incubation environment","Pairing: amazake (sweet fermented rice drink from koji) is non-alcoholic and pairs with morning or mid-afternoon service"}
{"Temperature too high (above 35°C) — kills Aspergillus or shifts to inferior strain","Insufficient humidity — surface mycelium without grain penetration = poor enzymatic activity","Using over-polished rice — some bran is needed for surface adherence of spores","Harvesting too early (under 40 hours) — enzymes not fully developed"}
The Art of Fermentation — Sandor Katz; Koji Alchemy — Jeremy Umansky and Rich Shih