Japanese Sea Urchin Uni Regional Varieties and Raw Service Philosophy
Hokkaido (Rishiri, Rebun Islands); Kyushu, Iwate for regional varieties
Uni (sea urchin gonads) is among Japan's most prized ingredients, defined by region, species, season, and freshness protocol. The two primary species are murasaki-uni (purple, Hokkaido) and bafun-uni (horse dung urchin, northern waters) — the latter considered superior for its richer, more concentrated sweetness. Hokkaido's Rishiri and Rebun Islands produce the benchmark bafun-uni, available June through August. Kyushu (Nagasaki) and Iwate also produce notable uni with regional flavour signatures. Freshness is paramount — deterioration begins within hours of harvest. Restaurant-grade uni arrives on wooden trays without chemical preservatives (mutenka-uni), while lower grades use alum (myōban) to extend shelf life at the cost of a metallic, bitter edge. In service, uni appears as nigiri (placed directly on shari with wasabi), gunkan-maki (battleship wrap with nori border), donburi (uni-don with rice), or pasta (fusion). Colour ranges from pale ivory to deep gold-orange — deeper colour typically indicates richer flavour in bafun-uni. Chefs avoid touching uni with hands; small wooden spatulas or spoons are used to preserve the delicate lobes.