Japanese Mizunomi: The Philosophy of Drinking Water in Cuisine
Japan — nationwide water culture, with specific regional spring water traditions
Water (mizu, 水) is perhaps the most important and least discussed ingredient in Japanese cuisine — the quality, source, and mineral profile of water fundamentally determines the character of dashi, sake, shochu, tea, rice cooking, and ramen. Japan's water culture ('mizunomi bunka') treats water as an ingredient with specific regional character rather than a neutral medium. Kyoto's famous water (Kyoto-mizu) from the Fushimi and Nishiyama aquifers is exceptionally soft (low mineral content, approximately 20–30 mg/L hardness) — this specific softness is why Kyoto sake (Fushimi-style) is delicate and mild, and why Kyoto dashi has a particularly clean, gentle quality. Nada (Kobe) brewing water (miyamizu) is harder (harder than 100mg/L) and contains more calcium and potassium — producing the 'masculine' (otoko-sake) style of Nada sake with more body and acid. The rice-to-water ratio in cooking, the temperature at which water is added to different preparations, and the mineral interaction with specific ingredients are all aspects of water management in Japanese professional cooking. Spring water from specific Japanese sources (Asahi-Fuji, Yuki Kamui) is preferred by high-end tea ceremonies and ramen shops specifically for the mineral character's effect on flavour.