Japanese Hotate: Scallop Preparations from Raw to Grilled
Japan — Hokkaido (primary production), Aomori and Iwate Prefectures
Hotate (帆立, Japanese scallop, Patinopecten yessoensis) from Hokkaido's cold Okhotsk Sea waters is considered among the world's finest scallop — exceptional for its size, sweetness, and the remarkable quality of its coral (the orange roe sac, called himokawa). Japan is the world's second-largest scallop producer and Hokkaido accounts for the vast majority of domestic supply. The scallop's flavour profile is defined by high concentrations of glycine (sweetness amino acid) and succinic acid (umami contributor). Japanese scallop preparations span the full temperature range: sashimi (raw, sliced into petals or crosshatched for presentation); kaibashira no batayaki (grilled in the half shell with butter and soy — the definitive Hokkaido preparation); kaibashira sunomono (vinegared salad with cucumber); hotate no konbu-jime (kelp-cured for 30–60 minutes, producing a firmer, more umami-rich sashimi); and simmered preparations in dashi for small-scale kaiseki use. The coral (himo — the ruffle around the adductor muscle, not the roe specifically) is considered separately: it is more intensely flavoured than the white muscle, with a marine, slightly mineral character, and is treated as a garnish, grilled on skewers, or used in tsukudani.