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Japan — traditional koji applications; modern culinary extensions from 2000s Techniques

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Japan — traditional koji applications; modern culinary extensions from 2000s
Kōji Applications Beyond Fermentation — Modern Culinary Uses
Japan — traditional koji applications; modern culinary extensions from 2000s
Koji (Aspergillus oryzae) has expanded far beyond its traditional applications in sake, miso, and soy sauce fermentation to become one of the most exciting tools in contemporary Japanese and international culinary practices. The key is understanding that koji produces powerful enzymes — amylases (starch-to-sugar conversion), proteases (protein-to-amino acid breakdown), and lipases (fat breakdown) — that can be applied to any substrate to create unique flavour transformations. Current applications: koji-aged beef (koji applied to dry-aged beef surface accelerates tenderisation and develops umami far beyond standard dry-aging); koji butter (butter mixed with active koji for extraordinary spread with complex fermented notes); 'amazake' as sweetener (koji-saccharified rice creates natural sweetness without added sugar); miso pastes using non-traditional bases (chickpea miso, peanut miso); koji-aged eggs; shio koji in bread baking for enhanced Maillard browning; and the 'infinite umami' concept — applying koji proteolysis to any protein source to create custom paste seasonings.
fermentation technique