Provenance Technique Library

Japan — professional kaiseki and soba kitchen tradition Techniques

1 technique from Japan — professional kaiseki and soba kitchen tradition cuisine

Clear filters
1 result
Japan — professional kaiseki and soba kitchen tradition
Japanese Katsura-muki: Rotary Peeling and Thin Sheet Vegetable Technique
Japan — professional kaiseki and soba kitchen tradition
Katsuramuki (桂剥き, rotary peeling) is among the most demanding knife techniques in Japanese professional cooking — the production of a continuous, paper-thin sheet of vegetable (typically daikon, carrot, or cucumber) by rotating the vegetable against the blade in a controlled, spiral motion while the knife moves progressively inward. The result is a single unbroken sheet of vegetable that can measure 30–50cm or more in length with a thickness of 1–2mm throughout. The technique's purpose is both practical and aesthetic: thin sheets of daikon (tsuma) are the foundational garnish for sashimi, providing visual height, palate-cleansing moisture, and a fresh, neutral backdrop; sheets of cucumber serve the same role for specific preparations; sheets of carrot are used in decorative garnish work. Mastering katsuramuki is a benchmark in Japanese professional culinary training — the ability to produce a 1mm sheet of uniform thickness without breaks or torn sections across the entire vegetable takes months of daily practice. The mental model is of the vegetable as a scroll being slowly unrolled — the knife maintains a fixed position while the vegetable rotates and advances against the blade edge.
Techniques