Fugu Blowfish Preparation Licensed Chef
Japan (Shimonoseki Yamaguchi Prefecture as fugu capital; Osaka Dotonbori fugu restaurant tradition)
Fugu (河豚 or 鰒, pufferfish or blowfish) is the most legally regulated fish in Japanese cuisine — certain organs (liver, ovaries, skin in some species) contain lethal concentrations of tetrodotoxin (TTX), a neurotoxin 1,200 times more lethal than cyanide with no known antidote. Preparation and service of fugu requires a dedicated fugu processing licence (fugucho menkyo) obtained only after years of apprenticeship and examination — in some prefectures the licence examination takes three or more years to pass and requires practical demonstration of safe breakdown, organ identification, and waste disposal. Licensed fugu chefs break down the fish following a strict sequence: removing the toxic organs without puncturing them, washing the carcass repeatedly in fresh water, and maintaining strict segregation of edible and toxic parts in designated containers. The flesh of fugu (particularly torafugu, tiger pufferfish) is prized for its firm, white, delicately sweet meat with a distinctive texture unlike any other fish. Classic preparations include fugu sashimi (tessa) — paper-thin slices arranged chrysanthemum-like on a ceramic plate — and fugu nabe (tecchiri) hot pot. Blowfish is a Japanese delicacy both for its extraordinary flavour and the thrill of its regulation.