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Japan-wide — ceremonial significance rooted in Heian court cuisine Techniques

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Japan-wide — ceremonial significance rooted in Heian court cuisine
Tai/Sea Bream — Japan's Ceremonial Fish
Japan-wide — ceremonial significance rooted in Heian court cuisine
Madai (Japanese sea bream, Pagrus major) holds a singular position in Japanese culinary culture as the 'king of fish' — the ceremonial fish par excellence. Its name is embedded in the word 'medetai' (auspicious, celebratory), making it the mandatory fish at weddings, New Year celebrations, festive birthdays, and offerings at shrines. The fish is served whole (head-on) for maximum ceremonial impact, its rosy pink-and-silver colouring considered the most beautiful of any Japanese food fish. In technique: salt-grilled whole (shio-yaki) is the standard ceremonial presentation; sashimi from tai is delicate and sweet; tai rice (tai-meshi) where the fish steams atop seasoned rice is a classic regional preparation from Ehime Prefecture; tai no nitsuke (simmered in sake and soy) is winter home cooking. Wild tai from Akashi (Akashi-dai) or Naruto Strait (Naruto-dai) is considered the finest, commanding extraordinary prices.
ingredient