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Japan — native Japanese cultivar; izakaya cultural association developed in post-war period Techniques

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Japan — native Japanese cultivar; izakaya cultural association developed in post-war period
Shishito Peppers — Summer Vegetable and Izakaya Icon
Japan — native Japanese cultivar; izakaya cultural association developed in post-war period
Shishito (Capsicum annuum var. shishito) is a thin-walled, mild Japanese pepper that has become one of the most recognisable Japanese vegetables internationally, particularly as an izakaya and tapas-adjacent appetiser. The name derives from 'shishi' (lion) and 'togarashi' (pepper), because the tip of the pepper resembles a lion's face. The pepper is thin-walled, bright green, and typically mild — but with the famous unpredictability that roughly one in ten shishito peppers is notably spicy, making each bite a minor gamble that is part of the eating experience. This variability is due to inconsistent capsaicin distribution in the plant's population rather than any visible external indicator — a hot and mild shishito are visually identical. The canonical preparation is blistering in a dry cast iron pan or directly on a grill with no oil until the skin chars and blisters, then seasoning simply with flaked sea salt. The blistering collapses the thin walls slightly, softens the texture, and concentrates the sweet, vegetal flavour while adding Maillard-reaction complexity from the charred surfaces. The finished peppers should be eaten in one or two bites, held by the stem, and the entire pepper (minus stem) consumed including the seeds. Ponzu or a light sesame dressing are also classic accompaniments.
ingredient