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Japan (Wakayama Prefecture, 13th century; production industrialised in Edo period) Techniques

1 technique from Japan (Wakayama Prefecture, 13th century; production industrialised in Edo period) cuisine

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Japan (Wakayama Prefecture, 13th century; production industrialised in Edo period)
Japanese Shoyu Classification Tamari Shiro Saishikomi and Regional Soy Sauce Varieties
Japan (Wakayama Prefecture, 13th century; production industrialised in Edo period)
Japanese soy sauce (shoyu — 醤油) encompasses five legally defined categories, each with distinct production method, colour, flavour, and culinary applications. Koikuchi (濃口 — dark soy sauce): accounts for 80% of Japanese production; balanced salt-umami-sweet profile; all-purpose; predominantly from Kanto region, with Kikkoman as the globally known standard. Usukuchi (薄口 — light soy sauce): paler colour (deceptively 10% saltier than koikuchi), less fermented flavour, dominant in Kansai cooking for colour-preserving preparations; Higashimaru is the primary producer. Tamari (溜まり): historically the liquid runoff from miso production; rich, dark, thick, low in wheat, with intense umami; essential for teriyaki glazes and sashimi dipping; Aichi Prefecture dominant. Shiro shoyu (白醤油 — white soy sauce): palest of all, almost amber, minimal wheat fermentation period, delicate and sweet; used in chawanmushi and suimono for colour transparency. Saishikomi (再仕込み — double-brewed soy sauce): the most complex and rare; brewed using finished soy sauce instead of brine as the fermentation liquid — producing intensely rich, sweet, and thick sauce; Yamaguchi Prefecture specialty.
Ingredients and Procurement