Japanese Karasumi Pasta: East-West Technique Crossover
Japan — contemporary Japanese Italian-inspired cooking (c.2000s–present)
Karasumi pasta represents one of the most successful and intellectually interesting culinary crossovers in contemporary Japanese cuisine — the application of Japan's karasumi (dried grey mullet roe, the Japanese equivalent of Mediterranean bottarga) to Italian-format pasta in a way that honours both traditions while producing something genuinely new. The technique is simple: thin spaghetti (spaghettini or linguine) is cooked al dente, tossed in high-quality olive oil with minced garlic, dried chilli (togarashi rather than peperoncino), and finished with finely grated or shaved karasumi. The karasumi's salt and concentrated oceanic umami seasons the pasta without any additional salt being needed. Green shiso chiffonade (rather than Italian parsley) completes the dish. The crossover works because karasumi and bottarga share the same fundamental character (salt-cured dried mullet roe) and the technique for applying them is identical. The substitution of shiso for parsley and togarashi for peperoncino represents the Japanisation of the dish — neither Italian nor Japanese but specifically the bridge between them. This kind of conscious cross-technique application is a signature of the modern Japanese approach to foreign cuisines: complete technical mastery of the foreign tradition, then deliberate Japanese reinterpretation.