Japanese Nattō Culture: Fermented Soybeans, Regional Divide, and the Love-Hate Divide
Kantō region (particularly Ibaraki Prefecture), nationwide north of Osaka
Nattō—whole soybeans fermented with Bacillus subtilis var. natto—is Japan's most divisive food, inspiring near-universal enthusiasm in eastern Japan (especially Kanto and Tohoku) and widespread aversion in western Japan (Kansai and beyond). This geographic divide is culturally deep: studies show that only about 30% of Osaka and Kyoto residents eat nattō regularly, versus 90%+ in Tokyo and northern regions. The fermentation produces polyglutamic acid (responsible for the characteristic viscous strings) and nattokinase (a fibrinolytic enzyme with cardiovascular associations), along with vitamin K2, complete protein, and probiotic Bacillus cultures. Production requires specific small soybeans (ideally Okute variety from Ibaraki or Toyamas from Hokkaido), precise fermentation temperature (40–45°C for 22–24 hours), and straw-derived starter cultures (traditionally fermented in actual rice straw bundles—still used by some artisan producers). The distinctive stretchy strings are created by the polyglutamic acid polymer network—stirring nattō vigorously before eating is said to increase string production and improve flavor integration. For menu applications, nattō's extreme umami depth, probiotic character, and distinctive texture make it valuable for contemporary fermentation-forward concepts, though its flavor profile requires careful pairing. The standard serving—small polystyrene container with soy sauce and karashi mustard—belies its cultural complexity.