Japanese Suribachi Mortar Technique and Kitchen Tools
Japan — suribachi production centred in Banko-yaki pottery tradition of Mie Prefecture
The suribachi (すり鉢) — a ridged ceramic grinding bowl used with the wooden surikogi pestle — is one of Japan's most ancient and functionally elegant kitchen tools, its interior surface intentionally cast with rows of radiating grooves (kushi-me, comb marks) that dramatically increase grinding efficiency compared to a smooth mortar. The ridges create a coarser, faster surface for crushing sesame seeds (goma), tofu, miso, and soft vegetables. Unlike Western mortars, the suribachi is held at an angle and the pestle used in a circular downward motion against the ridged walls rather than vertical pounding — preserving the bowl's stability and preventing mess. Suribachi sizes range from 15 cm for table-side use to 30 cm+ for commercial applications. The tool is essential for: grinding toasted sesame into goma-ae dressing, mashing tofu with miso and sesame for dengaku filling, pureeing sanshō peppercorns, and making ohitashi dressings. Beyond the suribachi, Japanese kitchen tools include the tamagoyaki pan (rectangular copper or iron pan for layered egg), the shamoji (flat wooden rice paddle designed to cut through cooked grains rather than mash them), the otoshibuta (drop lid, wood or stainless, that creates gentle circulation within a pot during simmering), and the tawashi (natural palm fibre brush for scrubbing root vegetables). Each tool reflects a distinct culinary philosophy.