Amakuchi and Karakuchi Flavour Polarity in Japanese Cuisine
Amakuchi-karakuchi as culinary vocabulary: ancient; the systematic mapping to regional Japanese preference documented through food history scholarship; sake nihonshu-do measurement formalised in the 20th century; regional soy sauce and miso production differences traceable to Edo-period regional agricultural and climate conditions
Amakuchi (甘口, 'sweet mouth') and karakuchi (辛口, 'spicy/dry mouth') are the fundamental flavour polarity terms in Japanese cuisine that govern the seasoning vocabulary of sake, miso, soy sauce, and cooking preparations across Japan. The terms are not simply descriptive — they encode regional identity, seasonal preference, and the fundamental tension between sweet-oriented and dry-oriented sensibilities that runs through all of Japanese food culture. In sake, the nihonshu-do (sake metre) scale calibrates from sweet (amakuchi, -5 and below) through neutral to dry (karakuchi, +5 and above); the preference for one or the other varies dramatically by region. Southern Japan (Kagoshima, Miyazaki, Kumamoto) strongly favours amakuchi in soy sauce (sweet soy, amakuchi shoyu), miso, and sake, reflecting centuries of sugar cane culture and warmer climate preferences. Northern Honshu, Tokyo, and Niigata lean toward karakuchi — the clean dry finish of Niigata's tanrei-karakuchi sake is a national benchmark for the dry style. In soy sauce, Kyushu's tamari-type sweet soy (amakuchi shoyu, often sweetened with corn syrup in commercial production) is used in the same recipes where Tokyo cooks would use regular koikuchi soy, producing a noticeably sweeter result in the finished dish. The distinction extends to miso: shiro miso (Kyoto) is amakuchi; hatcho miso (Nagoya) and Sendai miso (Tohoku) are karakuchi. This polarity is a useful first-order mapping tool when approaching a regional Japanese recipe: understanding whether the tradition is amakuchi or karakuchi provides context for seasoning calibration before any recipe is followed.