Japanese Buri: Amberjack Life Stages and the Naming Tradition
Japan Sea coast (Toyama, Ishikawa, Niigata for premium winter buri), nationwide
Buri (Japanese amberjack, Seriola quinqueradiata) is one of Japan's most prized fish and the centerpiece of an unusual culinary tradition: the fish is known by completely different names at each stage of its life, and these names vary significantly by region. This 'life-stage naming' (shusse-uo—fish of promotion, mirroring career advancement) reflects the different flavor profiles, fat content, and culinary best-uses at each stage. In the Kanto (Tokyo) region, the stages are: wakashi (10–30cm), inada (30–40cm), warasa (40–60cm), buri (60cm+). In Kansai (Osaka), the same fish is named: tsubasu, hamachi, mejiro, buri. In various other regions, further local names exist. The culinary significance is not merely taxonomic—hamachi (young adult) has lighter, more delicate fat that suits sashimi and sushi, while mature buri (the older, fat-loaded fish caught in winter) has dramatically higher fat content (Toyama buri in December can reach 22–25% body fat) that calls for grilling, teriyaki, or shabu-shabu. The premium winter buri from Toyama Bay (kan-buri—cold season amberjack) is one of Japan's most celebrated seasonal ingredients—the kurobe-buri of Toyama has a dedicated ceremony and shipping protocol. The life-stage naming tradition also explains why 'hamachi' in Western Japanese restaurants typically means farmed amberjack, while 'buri' signals wild older fish.