Nigiri Sushi Edomae Seasoning Rice
Edo (Tokyo) — Edomae sushi developed 1820s-1830s; Yohei Hanaya credited with pressing fish on rice
Edomae nigiri sushi (江戸前握り寿司) — the rice-hand sushi originating in 19th century Tokyo (then Edo) — requires a specific rice preparation philosophy fundamentally different from modern sushi rice. Authentic Edomae: rice seasoned with red vinegar (akazu, made from sake lees/sake kasu) rather than rice vinegar — producing reddish-brown rice with deeper, more complex flavor. The rice body: soft enough to dissolve in the mouth with the fish, not separate. Body temperature rice: Edomae masters serve rice at body temperature (36-37°C) so it and fish arrive at the same temperature. Nigiri pressure: light, three-motion compression leaving air pockets so rice melts easily.