Japanese Kaiseki Hasun Second Tray Course Philosophy and Seasonal Ingredient Curation
Japan (Kyoto kaiseki tradition; formalised in cha-kaiseki tea ceremony meal structure 16th century)
Hassun (八寸 — 8-sun plate, approximately 24cm square cedar tray) is the pivotal third course in the kaiseki meal structure: a cedar-wood tray bearing one item from the sea (umi no mono) and one from the mountain (yama no mono), together constituting the seasonal theme statement of the entire meal. The hasun is often described as the 'heart' of kaiseki — the point at which the chef's seasonal vision is most directly communicated. The choice of sea and mountain items must reflect the current month's most characteristic seasonal offerings: December hassun might combine buri sashimi (peak winter yellowtail) with carved turnip (yukidaruma — snow-person shaped); cherry blossom season hassun pairs sakura trout with bamboo shoot; autumn hassun might combine matsutake mushroom from the mountain with sea urchin from the sea. The cedar tray itself contributes: fresh cedar releases aromatic phytoncides that add a forest-note atmosphere to the arrangement. The presentation is spare — only the two elements and perhaps a garnish, with the cedar surface as prominent visual component. Hassun traditionally precedes sake service, serving as drinking food (sakana — 肴) for the first alcohol of the meal.