Japanese Sudachi Kabosu and Domestic Citrus Acid Sources in Professional Cooking
Tokushima (sudachi), Oita (kabosu), Kochi/Tokushima (yuzu), Okinawa (shikuwasa)
While yuzu receives the most international attention as Japan's signature citrus, professional Japanese cooking relies on a diverse ecosystem of domestic acid sources, each with specific applications. Sudachi (Citrus sudachi, Tokushima prefecture) is a small green citrus — harvested before full ripeness — with a sharper, more direct acidity than yuzu and exceptional aromatic intensity. It is the defining citrus of Tokushima and the classic pairing with sanma (Pacific saury) in autumn. Kabosu (Oita prefecture) is larger, rounder, and more overtly acidic with a slightly resinous note — essential to Oita's ponzu preparations and the primary commercial ponzu base. Yuzu (Kochi and Tokushima production) provides floral-aromatic zest and juice throughout the winter. Sudaidai (daidai, bitter orange) provides a different bitterness and is used in traditional New Year dishes (tachibana, kagami mochi decoration). Shikuwasa (Okinawa) is a small citrus used in Okinawan cuisine — lighter acid, slightly sweet — now appearing nationally in cocktail culture. Hanayu (small wild yuzu) provides rustic early-season aroma. Professional applications: zest vs juice are treated entirely separately — zest for aromatic decoration and oil expression, juice for acid seasoning. Ponzu (dashi + citrus juice + soy) is the primary format for deploying these acids, with each citrus creating a distinct ponzu character.