San'in Region Cuisine — Tottori and Shimane Food Culture
Tottori and Shimane prefectures, Japan — Sea of Japan coast
The San'in region (literally 'shadow of the mountains') — Tottori and Shimane prefectures along the Sea of Japan coast — represents one of Japan's most undiscovered culinary territories. Isolated by the Chugoku Mountains from the more populous Pacific coast, San'in developed distinct food traditions shaped by harsh winters, abundant Sea of Japan seafood, and unique agricultural conditions. Key elements: Matsuba-gani (Tottori's snow crab, considered the finest in Japan with strict quantity limits and branded certification); Yamazame (river shark, a freshwater delicacy); Izumo soba (flat, grey-brown buckwheat noodles served in lacquer boxes, uniquely ground with husk for nutty, robust flavour); Izumo taisha Shrine cuisine (shojin-influenced ceremonial food); Tottori wagyu (lesser-known but high-quality beef); Nashi pear from Tottori (the single most important agricultural product in the prefecture); Nodoguro (blackthroat sea perch) considered among the finest eating fish in Japan.