Wasabi Cultivation and Fresh Grating Technique
Japan — Shizuoka and Nagano prefectures; Wasabia japonica cultivation since 17th century
True wasabi (Wasabia japonica, hon-wasabi) is one of the world's most labour-intensive agricultural products and one of the most misunderstood condiments outside Japan. What most global sushi consumers eat as wasabi is horseradish paste (seiyou wasabi) dyed green — a flavour approximation with no botanical relationship to the real plant. True wasabi is a semi-aquatic perennial that grows in clean cold mountain stream water or in carefully managed moist beds, requiring 18–24 months to develop a grating rhizome of appreciable size. Primary cultivation regions: Shizuoka (Izu Peninsula, Amagi region), Nagano (Azumino), and Iwate. The rhizome contains isothiocyanate compounds that produce the characteristic nasal-clearing pungency — identical chemistry to horseradish but with a fresher, more volatile, aromatic complexity including sweet green notes absent in horseradish. Fresh wasabi prepared by grating on a sharkskin grater (same concept as using fine microplane): circular motion, gentle pressure, very fine grating produces creamy paste that retains peak flavour for only 15 minutes before volatile compounds begin to dissipate. This time-sensitivity is central to wasabi service philosophy: grate at the table immediately before use, or prepare portion by portion during service. Once grated, covering with damp cloth retards oxidation slightly. Dried wasabi powder and tube paste are stable approximations — useful but fundamentally different experiences.