Japanese Katsuobushi Production Drying Fermenting and the Three Grades of Bonito Flakes
Yaizu, Shizuoka prefecture; Makurazaki, Kagoshima (second major production centre)
Katsuobushi (dried fermented skipjack tuna) is among the most labour-intensive and biochemically complex food products in Japanese cuisine — and the primary source of the essential inosinic acid (IMP) umami compound in dashi. The production process from live katsuo to finished honkarebushi spans four to six months and involves boiling, smoking, sun-drying, and multiple cycles of Aspergillus glaucus mould cultivation. Three main grades exist: arabushi (smoked only, not mould-fermented) is the most widely used and commercially produced form; karebushi adds one or two mould fermentation cycles creating more complex enzymes; honkarebushi ('true dried') undergoes three or more full mould cycles over months, achieving the extraordinary depth used in premium dashi and fine kaiseki. Yaizu (Shizuoka prefecture) is the historic production centre. The shaving device (kezuribako or katsuobushi-ori) is essential for fresh flakes (hanakatsuo) from blocks. Pre-shaved flakes oxidise rapidly — freshly shaved katsuobushi delivers higher aromatic volatility and cleaner flavour. Regional variants include sodabushi (from frigate mackerel) and sababushi (mackerel), each imparting different dashi character.