Japanese Hirezake: Grilled Pufferfish Fin Sake and the Ritual of Winter Drinking
Japan — Osaka and Tokyo fugu culture, winter season speciality
Hirezake — grilled fugu (pufferfish) fin sake — is one of Japan's most theatrical and culturally specific hot drinks: sake infused with the dried, grilled fins of the torafugu (tiger pufferfish) to produce a deeply savoury, collagen-rich, slightly smoky beverage drunk hot from ceramic cups during the winter months when fugu is at its peak season. The preparation is simple but requires specific technique: dried torafugu fins (hiresakana) are lightly grilled over charcoal until fragrant, placed in a heat-resistant ceramic cup or flask, and covered with hot sake (typically a medium-grade junmai that won't be overpowered but won't be wasted). The cup is covered, the sake allowed to infuse for 2-3 minutes, then ignited briefly (the alcohol vapour above the liquid catches flame) and the flame blown out before drinking. This flambe step caramelises the surface, removes some harsh vapours, and is purely theatrical — a moment that focuses attention and creates anticipation. The flavour that results is remarkable: the collagen from the fin gelatin dissolves slightly into the warm sake, creating a viscous, almost oily texture; the grilled char notes from the fin add smoke; the fish umami creates a savoury depth in the sake that transforms it from a neutral grain spirit into something with the character of a rich broth. Hirezake is typically drunk at fugu restaurants (fugu-ya) during the course of a fugu meal, served between the delicate sashimi preparations and heavier grilled courses. The ritual of preparation — the grilling, the infusion, the flame — is part of the experience, not merely a quirk of production.