Japanese Fish Aging (Nekasei) — Dry Aging Seafood
Tokyo, Japan — Edomae sushi tradition, systematised 19th century
Nekasei (sleeping/resting) refers to the deliberate aged resting of fish before service — a practice developed in Edomae sushi and now systematised across high-end Japanese seafood. Freshly killed fish is in rigor mortis for several hours and has minimal flavour — the umami-producing amino acids (inosinic acid/IMP) reach their peak 12–36 hours after death depending on species, then decline. Skilled aging holds fish at this peak or extends the window through controlled temperature (1–3°C), humidity, and wrapping conditions. Methods include: kombu wrapping (kobujime, which draws out moisture and adds mild mineral-umami), paper wrapping and refrigeration (standard resting), skin-off versus skin-on aging, and the extreme ikejime + overnight hanging technique used for large fish (tuna, buri) in specialist restaurants. The resurgence of nekasei in contemporary Japanese omakase represents a shift away from the 'freshest is best' paradigm toward a more nuanced 'right time is best' philosophy.