Akita Prefecture, Sea of Japan coast; hatahata winter arrival historically drove production; over 500 years tradition
Shottsuru is Akita Prefecture's native fish sauce—one of Japan's three historically documented regional fish sauces alongside Ishikawa's ishiru and Kagawa's ikariso—made from fermented hatahata (sandfish, Arctoscopus japonicus) with salt, over a fermentation and aging period of one to three years. Hatahata is a small, delicate silverfish that has deep cultural significance in Akita, where it arrives in massive winter runs along the Japan Sea coast and was historically a critical protein source for coastal communities. The fish is layered with salt (typically 20-30% by weight) in wooden barrels and allowed to slowly break down through enzymatic autolysis and bacterial fermentation, producing an amber-to-brown liquid with intense oceanic umami and a pungent, concentrated fishy fragrance that mellows significantly when cooked. Shottsuru's flavor profile is richer and more complex than standard soy sauce but less salt-forward and more oceanic. It is used as a seasoning for nabe hot pot (particularly kiritanpo nabe), for pickling, and as a condiment with the hatahata itself when served grilled. The traditional production was nearly lost but has been revived through artisanal producers in Akita. The flavor is closest to Southeast Asian fish sauce but with more fermentation complexity from the longer Japanese aging process.
Intense oceanic umami; pungent fish fermentation fragrance mellows with cooking; saline with complex amino acid depth
{"Hatahata sandfish layered with salt (20-30% by weight) and aged 1-3 years minimum","Enzymatic autolysis breaks down fish proteins into amino acids creating deep oceanic umami","Kiritanpo nabe seasoned with shottsuru is the canonical Akita application","Use sparingly as seasoning—high salt concentration means small amounts season generously","Historical near-extinction and revival represents broader trend of regional condiment preservation"}
{"Shottsuru nabe: heat in dashi with vegetables before adding; raw shottsuru in soup is too pungent","Mix with ponzu (citrus-soy) for a complex dipping sauce for hot pot or grilled fish","Extremely small amounts added to pasta or stews function as invisible umami depth","Prefer artisanal producers: Kamada Shottsuru and Yamamoto Shottsuru are respected Akita brands"}
{"Over-adding before tasting—shottsuru's salt and intensity is concentrated","Expecting the same profile as Thai fish sauce—shottsuru is more complex and less sharp","Not heating before adding to preparations where the raw fish sauce fragrance is too pungent","Storing after opening without proper refrigeration—fish sauce degrades in warm conditions"}
Japanese regional fermented food documentation; Akita prefectural culinary records