Japanese Aburi: Flame-Torching Technique in Modern Sushi
Japan — modern Edomae sushi evolution, popularised in the 1990s–2000s
Aburi (炙り, 'sear' or 'flame-singe') describes the technique of briefly applying a direct flame (typically from a handheld butane blowtorch) to the surface of sushi, sashimi, or other preparations to create a specific seared quality on the surface while leaving the interior raw. The technique originated in traditional Japanese cooking contexts — aburi kamaboko, aburi sake — but became widely adopted in contemporary sushi as a way to create a new flavour dimension beyond the purely raw. When applied to fatty fish (salmon, otoro, hamachi), the flame briefly renders the surface fat, creating a toasted, slightly caramelised layer with a subtle smokiness that contrasts with the cool, raw interior. The Maillard reaction occurs on the fat-rich surface, adding depth and complexity. Aburi sushi has become a signature of Osaka-style sushi (oshizushi aburi versions are particularly popular) and a contemporary sushi innovation. The technique is simple to execute but requires attention to heat distance, duration, and angle — the goal is surface transformation without heat penetration beyond 2–3mm. Over-torching produces cooked fish throughout, which defeats the raw-interior principle.