Funazushi Ancient Fermented Lake Carp Narezushi
Lake Biwa, Shiga Prefecture — documented tradition over 1,000 years
Funazushi is Japan's oldest surviving complete fermented fish preparation, produced exclusively from nigorobuna (crucian carp) native to Lake Biwa in Shiga Prefecture, representing the original form of narezushi from which all modern sushi evolved. The process involves a year-long salt cure followed by one to three years of fermented rice lacto-fermentation, producing a pungently acidic, cheese-like preserved fish that bears no superficial resemblance to contemporary sushi beyond its ancestral relationship. Female nigorobuna are prized during spring spawning season, salted whole for one year in cedar barrels, then packed in cooked rice with salt and allowed to undergo full lactic acid fermentation through multiple seasons. The resulting funazushi has a strong ammonia-adjacent smell balanced by intense umami and sour depth, consumed thinly sliced as sake accompaniment or gifted as regional prestige product. It represents the complete spectrum of narezushi evolution: from this fully-fermented ancestral form, intermediate hayazushi (quick-fermented), and finally Edo-style nigirizushi (no fermentation, vinegar substitute) developed across centuries.