Sashimi Presentation — Mori and Ken Standards
Japan — sashimi presentation codified in Edo period Edomae cuisine
Professional sashimi plating (mori, 盛り, meaning 'to heap/arrange') follows strict standards for visual presentation that are as codified as the cutting technique. The arrangement of sashimi on the plate communicates seasoning, season, and respect for the ingredient. Key presentation elements: ken (けん, the garnish bed — typically katsuramuki daikon cut into fine julienne, serving as both visual base and palate cleanser); tsuma (妻, secondary garnish — shiso/perilla leaf, cucumber slice, takuwan, or pickled ginger that frames the fish); yakumi (薬味, condiment accompaniment — wasabi, grated ginger for specific fish, momiji-oroshi for ponzu); the sashimi pieces themselves arranged with careful consideration of height, colour contrast, and eating sequence (typically lighter/white fish at front, red fish toward back). A full sashimi platter for restaurant service follows a visual hierarchy with the most premium item at the visual peak.