Niboshi Iriko Small Dried Sardine Dashi
Japan (coastal fishing communities, eastern and northern Japan regional preference)
Niboshi (煮干し, 'boiled-dried') or iriko in western Japan are small dried anchovies or sardines used to make a robustly flavoured, assertively fishy dashi. The fish — typically katakuchi iwashi (Japanese anchovy, Engraulis japonicus) — are simmered briefly in seawater immediately after catch to denature enzymes and prevent histamine formation, then sun-dried. The resulting dried fish carry strong umami, inosinic acid, and a characteristic marine bitterness from oxidised lipids. For dashi, the heads and dark visceral strips along the belly are typically removed (watanuki) to reduce bitterness, though some cooks prefer full-body intensity. Cold-water extraction (mizudashi — soaking overnight in cold water) produces a cleaner, sweeter result than hot extraction. Niboshi dashi is especially prized for miso soup in eastern Japan (Tohoku, Kanto) and for ramen broth bases. The bitterness that can be a defect in refined cooking becomes a sought feature in robust applications — pairing powerfully with rich hatcho miso or assertive braised vegetables. Niboshi contain higher concentrations of inosinic acid than katsuobushi, producing profound savoury depth.