Japanese Amanatsu and Citrus Season: Beyond Yuzu to the Full Citrus Spectrum
Kochi and Ehime Prefectures (primary citrus production), Kyushu islands
Japanese citrus culture encompasses a far broader spectrum than the internationally recognized yuzu—Japan grows over 50 distinct citrus varieties, many unique to specific regions, with seasonal availability patterns that create a year-round citrus vocabulary for professional kitchens. Beyond yuzu (winter peak, December–February): Amanatsu (sweet summer citrus, April–June, bitter-sweet flavor profile), Haruka (pale yellow winter citrus with delicate floral sweetness), Kawachi Bankan (large, mild, summer—sometimes called 'poor man's grapefruit'), Hyūganatsu (Miyazaki, spring—the white pith is sweet and eaten with the flesh), Ponkan (winter mandarin, very sweet, loose peel), Beni Madonna (high-end winter mandarin with jelly texture), Jabara (Wakayama, bitter-sour, the anti-allergy citrus with traditional health claims), and Sudachi (summer-autumn, Tokushima—the small green citrus essential with matsutake mushroom and soba). This spectrum allows year-round citrus acid on the menu without repeating the same variety. Each variety has distinct applications: Sudachi is best fresh-squeezed over hot preparations (because its volatile oils bloom in heat); yuzu zest (not juice) is the primary application in cold-weather cooking because the juice is too acidic; kabosu (Oita) is used primarily in ponzu production. For professionals, building a seasonal citrus rotation instead of relying on yuzu year-round demonstrates sophisticated seasonal awareness.