Japanese Sumibiyaki: Charcoal Grill Techniques Beyond Yakitori
Japan — nationwide grilling tradition
Sumibiyaki (炭火焼き, charcoal grilling) as a broader category encompasses the application of hardwood charcoal heat to fish, meat, vegetables, and shellfish outside the context of yakitori (which has its own entry). Japanese charcoal grilling culture, particularly using binchotan (white charcoal — covered separately), extends to numerous preparations: sakana no shioyaki (salt-grilled whole fish), sawara no misoyaki (Spanish mackerel in miso marinade), yakionigiri (grilled rice balls), and yakimono (the grilled course in kaiseki). The technique's central discipline is heat management through distance from the charcoal bed, with Japanese grill masters developing an intuitive sense of ember condition, radiant heat intensity, and the critical transition from surface moisture evaporation to Maillard browning. Sakana no shioyaki is the paradigmatic technique: the fish (whole or fillet) is salted 30–60 minutes before grilling to draw surface moisture, patted dry, then grilled at medium-high distance. The skin must remain intact and become crisp without burning; the flesh must be moist and just cooked to opaque. The aesthetic standard for a grilled fish served in a ryokan or kaiseki is exacting: even colour, no burn marks on the most visible surface, the salt visible as a white crust on tail and fins.