Shio Koji — Salt Koji Marinade and Seasoning
Japan — rediscovered tradition; modern popularisation from early 2000s
Shio koji is a mixture of koji rice (rice inoculated with Aspergillus oryzae) and sea salt, fermented for 7–14 days at room temperature until the enzymes from the koji mould liquefy the rice partially and create a fragrant, slightly sweet, intensely umami seasoning paste/liquid. Shio koji has become one of the most significant modern Japanese ingredient innovations — rediscovered in the early 2000s and now used as: a marinade for chicken (produces extraordinary tenderness and browning through enzymatic protein breakdown); a salt substitute (used 1:1 by weight instead of salt, it reduces soy sauce consumption and adds natural umami); a pickling medium (vegetables soaked in shio koji develop a subtle, clean fermented flavour in 6–12 hours); and a curing agent for fish and meat. The enzymes in koji (proteases and amylases) break down proteins and starches, tenderising meat and developing depth of flavour beyond what simple salt marination achieves.