Ankimo Monkfish Liver Foie Gras Japanese Sea Delicacy
Pacific and Sea of Japan; Tokyo Bay and Tohoku coast for commercial fishing; winter peak season
Ankimo is the steamed and served liver of anko (anglerfish, Lophius litulon)—considered Japan's marine equivalent of foie gras, with a similarly rich, creamy, intensely flavored texture that coats the palate. Anglerfish are caught in deep Pacific and Sea of Japan waters from November through February; the season's cold water produces liver with the highest fat content. The preparation requires removing the liver from the fish, cleaning thoroughly to remove any bile ducts or discoloration (which would create bitterness), marinating briefly in sake and salt to purify flavor, then rolling tightly in plastic wrap or tofu skin (yuba) into a cylinder shape, steaming at medium temperature (70-75°C for 40-60 minutes), then refrigerating until firm before slicing. The finished ankimo is pale pink-beige, firm enough to slice cleanly but yielding to slight pressure, and extraordinarily rich. Service at high-end sushi bars and kaiseki: thin slices presented with ponzu, grated daikon with momiji oroshi (red maple paste), and finely sliced negi. The intensely fatty, umami-rich quality of ankimo makes it one of Japanese cuisine's most demanding pairings—it suits sake (particularly junmai ginjo for clean cut-through), but the pairing tradition is ponzu's acidity as the functional counterpoint.