Japanese Katsuobushi Aging and Honkarebushi Production
Japan — Kagoshima and Kochi prefectures; Makurazaki and Yaizu as production centres
Katsuobushi (dried, smoked, fermented skipjack tuna) is Japan's most important flavour ingredient — the primary source of inosinate (IMP) umami in dashi, and through its synergy with glutamate from kombu, the foundation of Japanese cuisine's flavour philosophy. The production of the highest grade, honkarebushi (本枯節), is among the world's most intensive food production processes: four to six months of smoke-drying alternating with mould cultivation (Aspergillus glaucus, specifically selected strains) in a labour-intensive cycle that transforms fresh skipjack into a wood-hard, mould-covered block of extraordinary complexity. Production stages: fillet and boil the skipjack (arabushi preparation); smoke-dry repeatedly over oak or cherry wood; then alternate cycles of sun-drying and mould application — each cycle lasting 10–14 days, then scraping the dried mould before repeating. Standard katsuobushi (arabushi/namaribushi) undergoes only the smoke-drying stage — the mould-aging cycles define the honkarebushi distinction. The mould (karebushi-kin) is specifically beneficial, not a spoilage organism: it produces enzymes that break down fats and proteins into free amino acids and aromatic compounds, dramatically increasing flavour complexity. The final honkarebushi block contains virtually no moisture, has a flavour intensity 50% higher than arabushi, and will last years if kept dry. When grated (削り節, kezuribushi) fresh from the block, the katsuobushi has aromatic complexity, sweetness, and depth impossible from pre-packaged flakes.