Japanese Sanma: Pacific Saury and the Autumn Grill Ritual
Pacific coast Japan, associated with autumn (September–November)
Sanma (Pacific saury, Cololabis saira) is one of Japan's most seasonally specific fish—its arrival in autumn signals the end of summer with the same cultural weight as the first cherry blossoms signal spring. The fish migrates southward from the cold Okhotsk Sea from September through November, and its peak quality occurs when the fat content (measured as percentage of body weight) reaches its seasonal maximum of 16–22%—a richness that creates the distinctive dripping, smoke-producing char when grilled over charcoal. The Japanese relationship with sanma is almost nostalgic in its seasonal specificity: newspaper food sections annually report on that year's sanma arrival, size, and fat content; fishing quotas with Russia and China are political news; and a poor harvest year prompts genuine public concern. The preparation is deliberately simple—salt-grilled whole (sanma no shioyaki), nothing added except sea salt applied 20–30 minutes before grilling to draw surface moisture, resulting in a blistered, smoky exterior with a moist interior that yields fat-rich flesh and the small edible organs (particularly the bitter liver in the digestive tract, which some consider the finest bite on the fish). Daikon oroshi (grated radish) and sudachi are the essential accompaniments, providing enzymatic digestive support and acid counterpoint to the rich fat.