Japanese Natto Moromi and Soy Fermentation Spectrum
Japan — nationwide fermentation culture, with regional variations
Beyond natto (fermented soybeans, covered elsewhere) and soy sauce production, Japan has developed a spectrum of fermented soy products that represent the full range of bacterial and fungal fermentation of the soybean. Moromi (醪) is the unpressed fermented mash that forms the basis of soy sauce production — thick, dark, complex, and intensely flavoured from the 6–18 month fermentation of wheat, soybeans, salt, and water by Aspergillus oryzae (koji) mould and lactic acid bacteria. Premium moromi is consumed directly as a condiment (moromi-miso) — its flavour is more textured, complex, and intense than pressed soy sauce. Hamanatto (浜納豆) is a distinct fermentation from Hamamatsu (Shizuoka Prefecture) where whole soybeans are inoculated with koji and fermented dry for 6–12 months without the sticky texture of standard natto — the result is small, dry, dark, intensely savoury beans used as a condiment with rice and sake. Temarizushi-style hamanatto preparations place a single hamanatto bean on a pressed rice ball for a salt-umami punch. Doenjang-adjacent products exist in some Japanese prefectures through historical Korea-Japan trade connections. Each product represents a different point on the fermentation intensity scale.