Japan (Fukui Prefecture origin 1956; Niigata Uonuma as premium benchmark)
Koshihikari (コシヒカリ) is Japan's most celebrated rice variety — bred in 1956 from Norin 22 and Norin 1 crossings at Fukui Prefecture's agricultural experiment station — and accounts for roughly 37% of all rice planted in Japan today. Its dominance stems from exceptional stickiness, a characteristic balance of soft chewiness and slight resistance (al dente quality), natural sweetness, and the way each grain maintains its individual identity even when cooked to optimal tenderness. However, regional sub-varieties tell a richer story: Niigata Uonuma koshihikari (grown in the steep-sided valleys where temperature differentials between day and night are extreme) is priced 2–3x standard; Minamiuonuma Koide-grown rice is considered the apex. Akita Komachi, Yamagata Tsuyahime, Hokkaido Nanatsuboshi, and Fukuoka Hinohikari each have devoted followings. The concept of 'maisōbi' (daily rice freshness) is central — premium rice is milled immediately before sale (tōji-date stamped on bags) and consumed within weeks. Suihanki (rice cooker) settings for koshihikari differ from other varieties. Restaurants with serious rice culture display their rice provenance prominently, sometimes cooking separate varieties for different dishes.
Slightly sweet, subtly earthy, clean starchy finish; excellent cohesion and sheen; each grain distinct but cohesive when cooked
{"Temperature differential in mountain valleys critical to Uonuma's superiority — stress sweetens starch","Mill date (seimai-bi) stamped on premium bags — freshly milled rice essential within 2–4 weeks","Each region's terroir produces distinct flavour — Niigata vs Akita vs Fukushima measurably different","Optimal water absorption ratio for koshihikari: 1:1.1 to 1:1.2 water to rice","Resting cooked rice (15 minutes covered) allows moisture to equilibrate throughout grain"}
{"Store rice in sealed container in cool dark place — refrigerator ideal in summer","Premium restaurants sometimes blend two regional koshihikari varieties for complexity","For sushi rice, slightly younger (less aged) koshihikari gives better vinegar absorption","Minamiuonuma Uonuma rice is available via direct-from-farmer postal subscriptions in Japan"}
{"Using rice beyond 3 months from milling — starch oxidises and loses sweetness","Washing rice under running water rather than gentle bowl-swirl — breaks fragile grain exterior","Skipping soaking — koshihikari benefits from 30-minute soak before cooking","Lifting lid during cooking — steam essential to finish cooking after heat is turned off"}
Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art — Shizuo Tsuji; Rice, Noodle, Fish — Matt Goulding