Japanese Shioyaki Salmon: Pacific Salmon Varieties and the Breakfast Grill
Hokkaido (Pacific salmon fishing culture), nationwide Japan
Shioyaki salmon—salt-grilled Pacific salmon—is arguably Japan's most eaten fish preparation, occupying a position in the daily breakfast (asagohan) that is both culturally foundational and technically informative. The morning meal teishoku typically features rice, miso soup, pickles, and a piece of shioyaki salmon on a small plate—a combination whose perfect simplicity belies the sourcing and technique decisions embedded in it. Japan distinguishes carefully between Pacific salmon species: Shirosake (chum salmon—most common, lower fat, mild flavor), Ginzake (coho—medium fat, clean flavor used for general purpose), Tokishirazu (the rarest—king salmon that migrates off-schedule and is exceptionally fat-rich, commands premium prices), Sakura masu (cherry salmon—the freshwater species with delicate pink flesh), and Beni-sake (sockeye—bright red flesh, strong flavor, used for specific preparations). The salt-grilling technique is deliberately simple: salt applied 15–20 minutes before grilling, then cooked skin-side down first to render fat and crisp the skin, then turned once to complete cooking. The skin is considered the best part by connoisseurs—its rendered fat and crisp texture is specific to proper shioyaki technique. Daikon oroshi and soy sauce are the traditional accompaniments, providing enzyme activity and acid to balance the rich fish fat.