Provenance Technique Library

Japan — pan-cultural cooking principle throughout Japanese culinary tradition Techniques

1 technique from Japan — pan-cultural cooking principle throughout Japanese culinary tradition cuisine

Clear filters
1 result
Japan — pan-cultural cooking principle throughout Japanese culinary tradition
Amakara — The Sweet-Savoury Balance in Japanese Cooking
Japan — pan-cultural cooking principle throughout Japanese culinary tradition
Amakara (甘辛, 'sweet-spicy/savoury') describes Japan's fundamental flavour balance principle — the deliberate combination of sweet (mirin, sugar, hon-mirin) and savoury (soy, salt, dashi) that runs through virtually every cooked Japanese dish. Unlike Western cuisine which often separates sweet (dessert) and savoury (main course) into different meal stages, Japanese cooking integrates this balance within individual dishes: teriyaki sauce, nimono cooking liquid, kabayaki tare, tsukudani, and most yakitori tares are all explicitly amakara preparations. The balance is not a fixed ratio but a spectrum adjusted by dish, season, and region — Kansai cooking tends sweeter (more mirin, earlier sugar addition); Kanto cooking tends saltier-savoury. Understanding amakara is understanding why Japanese cooked dishes have a satisfying completeness that doesn't leave you wanting either more salt or more sweetness.
flavour principle