Japan (coastal fishing communities; salt-road trading tradition; nationwide production from hokke in Hokkaido to aji in Kanagawa)
Himono (干物, 'dried things') are fish that have been opened — butterflied or filleted — and sun-dried or wind-dried to reduce moisture content, concentrate flavour, and extend shelf life. The most common himono are aji (horse mackerel), saba (mackerel), sanma (Pacific saury), iwashi (sardine), and hokke (Atka mackerel). The preparation involves salting the opened fish lightly, then drying on bamboo racks or wire frames in sunlight and sea air — traditionally for one day, now often artificially dried with fans for production efficiency. The reduction of moisture concentrates the fish's natural umami compounds and produces a distinctive flavour transformation: the himono is neither raw nor cooked, but a intermediate preserved state with its own specific character. Grilling himono requires careful technique: skin-side up first (to prevent the skin from contracting and curling which would prevent even cooking), cooked over charcoal or high heat until the skin is blistered and slightly charred in places, then turned for a brief finish on the flesh side. Himono is the standard breakfast fish at ryokan (traditional inns), bento additions, and late-night izakaya food. The home smell of grilling himono in the morning was for generations a defining sensory element of Japanese domestic life.
Concentrated, assertively marine, savoury; the flavour is more intense than fresh fish; charred blistered skin adds smokiness and bitterness
{"Moisture reduction: drying concentrates flavour compounds and changes the texture to firmer, more cohesive","Salting before drying: light salt cure draws some moisture and adds surface seasoning","Skin-side up first: prevents skin curl from heat; allows flesh to cook through before intense skin charring","High heat for skin blistering: charred, blistered skin is the marker of properly grilled himono","Natural vs artificial drying: traditional sun and sea-wind dried himono has superior flavour to fan-dried"}
{"The charred tail and fin edges of himono are considered the cook's snack — intensely flavoured and crisp","Serve with grated daikon, soy sauce, and rice — the daikon's moisture and enzyme activity contrasts with the concentrated himono","Yuka (outdoor grilling rack) under the summer sun produces the most traditional himono flavour","Purchase himono from fishing port towns (Odawara, Ito, Numazu) where the morning sea air drying is still done traditionally"}
{"Flesh-side first — skin curls, fish distorts, and cooking becomes uneven","Insufficient heat — himono needs high heat to develop the characteristic blistered skin quickly","Over-drying before grilling — extremely dry himono becomes unpleasantly tough; optimal moisture content matters","Under-salting before drying — the salt drives out moisture; too little produces slow, uneven drying"}
Richie Donald, A Taste of Japan