Kohada Gizzard Shad Edomae Sushi
Japan (Tokyo Bay Edomae sushi tradition; Tokyo-Edo period fishing and pickling culture)
Kohada (小肌, gizzard shad, Konosirus punctatus) is one of the most technically demanding and philosophically central fish in Edomae sushi tradition. The fish is small, oily, and in its natural state intensely fishy — it requires the complete transformative sushi vinegaring cure (shime — salt-drawn then vinegar-marinated) before it can be served as nigiri. The shime technique requires precise timing calibrated to the fish's age, size, and season: too short a cure and the rawness is harsh; too long and the vinegar cooks the fish to a chalky, acid-wrecked texture. The fish's silver skin remains intact and becomes the visual hallmark of the kohada nigiri — lacy, patterned, iridescent. Sushi masters distinguish between the fish at different growth stages: shinko (newly hatched in August, tiny — 3 leaves per nigiri), kobashira (slightly larger), and full kohada. Shinko is the most prized: impossibly small, delicate, available only for a brief window in August, and commanding the highest prices. Kohada's centrality to Edomae tradition comes from the fact that a sushi chef cannot hide behind the ingredient — there is no fatty tuna to carry a mediocre vinegaring; kohada reveals technique absolutely.