Japanese Izushi: Lactic-Fermented Fish Rice of the North and the Narezushi Continuum
Japan — Hokkaido, Tohoku, and Sea of Japan coast; ancient narezushi tradition
Izushi is a traditional fermented fish preparation from northern Japan — a cousin of the ancient narezushi tradition that produced sushi's earliest ancestor — in which fish (typically salmon, saury, or herring), vegetables, and cooked rice are layered with koji and salt in a wooden barrel and allowed to ferment for 1-2 weeks through lactic fermentation driven by the koji's enzymes and naturally present lactobacillus bacteria. Unlike the long-aged narezushi of western Japan (such as Shiga Prefecture's funazushi, which ferments for 3 years), izushi is a quick ferment intended for winter consumption: the layering occurs in late autumn and the product is consumed within a month. Izushi occupies a crucial place in Japanese food history as an intermediate form between the ancient narezushi preservation technique (where rice was discarded after long fermentation, only the fish consumed) and modern sushi (where vinegar-seasoned fresh rice is consumed immediately). Izushi represents the transitional technology: the rice ferments lightly enough to remain edible and flavourful, consumed alongside the fish rather than discarded. The flavour of properly made izushi is complex: lactic-sour, deeply savoury from fish protein breakdown, sweet from the koji's starch conversion, and faintly funky. The vegetables layered throughout (carrot, yuzu peel, dried persimmon, konnyaku) provide colour contrast and textural variety. Izushi is associated specifically with Hokkaido and Sea of Japan coastal communities where salmon, herring, and saury provided the raw material. Contemporary izushi is produced commercially in these regions but increasingly rare as a home-made tradition.