Japanese Abalone Awabi Cultivation Prefectural Origins and Steamed Kaiseki Applications
Japan (Ise-Shima and Bōsō Peninsula as premium wild sources; Sanriku coast for farmed cultivation)
Awabi (鮑 — abalone, Haliotis discus and related species) is Japan's most prestigious shellfish and one of the world's most expensive by weight — live awabi reaching ¥8,000–30,000 per piece at premium Japanese restaurants. Japan's abalone culture is ancient: dried awabi was presented as tribute to the Imperial court since the Nara period, and the Ise Jingu shrine's connection to ama (海女 — female divers) who harvest awabi in Ise-Shima has 2,000+ years of documented history. The premium producing regions: Iwate Prefecture (Sanriku coast) for the largest live awabi in Japan; Chiba Prefecture's Bōsō Peninsula for strong-current wild awabi; Mie Prefecture (Ise-Shima) for the most culturally significant wild harvest through ama diving. Cultivation: farmed awabi (Chiba, Shimane, Miyagi) provides price accessibility while wild maintains luxury status. The preparation split: raw awabi (thin-sliced sashimi) reveals the characteristic oceanic crunch and marine sweetness; steamed awabi (mushi awabi) with sake, found in kaiseki, completely transforms the texture from firm-crunchy to tender-yielding while developing a complex steamed-marine flavour impossible in raw service.