Japanese Sasagaki and Sengiriziri: Precision Vegetable Cutting Techniques
Japan — kaiseki and traditional home cooking tradition
Japanese vegetable cutting techniques (hocho-sabaki, knife handling) represent a parallel development to Western classical cuts — equally systematised, equally precise, but oriented toward a different aesthetic and functional outcome. While French classical cuts emphasise consistent rectangles (brunoise, julienne), Japanese cuts often prioritise surface area maximisation for flavour absorption, textural variation, or visual beauty through asymmetry. Key cuts beyond the basic: Sasagaki (笹掛き) — pencil-shaving cut applied to gobō (burdock root) and carrot. The vegetable is held like a pencil and shaved into thin, curling strips using the blade pulled toward the body. The result is thin, irregular, papery strips with a very large surface area that absorbs seasoning quickly and cooks faster than julienne. Sengiri (千切り) — the Japanese equivalent of julienne: fine matchstick cuts, typically applied to daikon, carrot, and cabbage. Used in sunomono salads, tsukemono, and gyoza filling. Hangetsu-giri (半月切り, half-moon cut): vegetables cut in half lengthwise then sliced into semicircles — the most common cut for root vegetables in simmered dishes. Ran-giri (乱切り, random rolling cut): the vegetable is rolled 90 degrees between each cut, producing irregular angular pieces with multiple cut faces — maximises surface area in simmered dishes for better flavour absorption. Kikka-kabu (菊花かぶ, chrysanthemum turnip): fine diagonal cuts in both directions produce a turnip that opens into a chrysanthemum-like flower when pickled.