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Japan — Hokkaido, San-riku, Kyushu coasts Techniques

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Japan — Hokkaido, San-riku, Kyushu coasts
Japanese Uni (Sea Urchin) Culture: Regional Varieties and Raw Service Philosophy
Japan — Hokkaido, San-riku, Kyushu coasts
Uni, the gonads of sea urchin, represents one of Japanese cuisine's most nuanced luxury ingredients. Japan consumes more sea urchin than any other country, with domestic supply from Hokkaido's Rebun and Rishiri islands, the San-riku coast, and Kyushu supplemented by imports from California, Chile, and Maine — often processed with alum (myoban) to preserve shape. The two principal species are Murasaki uni (Strongylocentrotus nudus), with deeper flavour, and Bafun uni (Strongylocentrotus intermedius) — smaller, more orange, sweeter with a rich cream-like finish. Hokkaido Bafun uni harvested during summer months is considered the apex: vivid orange-gold, firm yet yielding, with complex oceanic sweetness. Alum-free (mutenka) uni commands premium prices because it cannot be transported far or held long — demanding same-day service. On a sushi counter, mutenka uni signals both prestige and supply chain rigour. Service philosophy holds that uni should be presented on a shallow wooden box, allowing the ingredient to speak. Uni pasta has become a canonical yoshoku-Italian fusion dish in Tokyo restaurant culture.
Ingredients and Procurement