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Kyoto, Momoyama and Edo periods — tea ceremony meal evolved into full multi-course format Techniques

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Kyoto, Momoyama and Edo periods — tea ceremony meal evolved into full multi-course format
Seasonal Kaiseki — The Eight Courses and Their Logic
Kyoto, Momoyama and Edo periods — tea ceremony meal evolved into full multi-course format
Kaiseki's course structure is not arbitrary — each element in the sequence serves a specific purpose in the arc of flavour, texture, and the guest's perceptual journey. Understanding the internal logic of kaiseki's progression reveals why this structure has been refined over centuries into its current form. The canonical sequence begins with sakizuke (amuse-bouche, light and awakening), followed by hassun (the seasonal centerpiece platter establishing the theme), then mukozuke (raw fish, typically sashimi at its pristine best), followed by takiawase (simmered vegetables with protein, subtle and nourishing), then yakimono (grilled dish, the Maillard-reaction moment of the meal), fried and steamed courses (depending on season), rice and pickles (the comforting resolution), and finally mizugashi (seasonal fruit or light sweet) and omogashi (formal wagashi sweet with matcha). This structure deliberately alternates cooking methods, temperature, texture, and intensity. Raw fish arrives before any cooked protein, preserving palate sensitivity for delicate flavours. Simmered dishes build depth after the brightness of raw. The grilled course provides the only truly robust, charred flavours before the gentle resolution of rice. Each transition resets the palate while building cumulative satisfaction. The hassun selection — typically five to seven small preparations on a cedar tray — establishes the evening's seasonal motif, everything else in conversation with that statement.
culinary tradition