Natto Propagation Bacillus Subtilis Fermentation Science
Japan — Ibaraki Mito area has strongest natto culture; documented tradition over 1,000 years
Natto fermentation is driven by Bacillus subtilis natto — a strain selected and maintained in Japanese food culture for over 1,000 years that transforms cooked soybeans in 24 hours at 40°C into the characteristic stringy, ammonia-scented, deeply umami fermented food through an exceptional enzymatic activity producing nattokinase (a fibrinolytic enzyme studied for cardiovascular benefits), vitamin K2, and the poly-glutamic acid polymer chains that create natto's signature stickiness. The production process begins with whole soybeans (ideally small-grain kotsubukidaizu for maximum surface area to volume ratio) soaked overnight, pressure-steamed until fully soft, inoculated with Bacillus subtilis culture (available as commercial starter or preserved from previous batch), packed in shallow containers with limited air circulation, and fermented at 40°C for 18-24 hours until the surface develops white mycelium coverage and the characteristic ammonia note emerges. The fermentation biology is demanding in its temperature precision — below 37°C the culture fails to develop adequately; above 45°C the culture dies and contamination risk rises. Home natto production has revived substantially through the health food movement.