List of Japanese ingredients

The following is a list of ingredients used in Japanese cuisine.

Plant sources

Cereal grain

Flour

Japanese noodles

Vegetables

(fruit vegetables)
(Cabbage family or Brassica leafy vegetables)
(Other leafy vegetables)
(onions or Allium spp. - negi)
(Root vegetables)
(Sprouts)
(Specialty vegetables)
(Pickled vegetables) - Tsukemono

Nuts

Seeds

Mushrooms

Seaweed

See also: Edible seaweed

Fruits

(citrus fruits)
This list will be limited to typical flavoring, etc. citrus. For fuller list, see Japanese citrus
(Other)

Soy products

  • edamame
  • miso
  • soy sauce (light, dark, tamari)
  • natto
  • Daitokuji natto
  • mame moyashi - soy sprouts
  • kinako - soy meal
  • irimame - dry-roasted soy beans and black soy beans (used in kakimochi, etc.)

Vegetable proteins

Animal sources

Eggs

Meats

Aquatic creatures

Every type of seafood imaginable features in Japanese cuisine. Only some of the most common are in the list below. Includes freshwater varieties.

Finned fish

(Marine fishes)
(Of which are blue-backed fish ao zakana)
(white-fleshed fish or shiromi zakana)
(Freshwater fish (incl. brackish and ocean-returning))

Mollusks

(squid, cuttlefish (ika))
(octopus (tako))
(bivalves)
(single shelled gastropods or conches)

Crustaceans (ebikani-rui, kokaku rui)

(crab (kani))
(lobsters, shrimps, prawns (ebi))

Echinoderms

Tunicates

Roe

(livers)

Processed seafood

Insects

Some insects have been considered regional delicacies, though often categorized as getemono or bizarre food.

Bizarre foods

The mamushi viper are used to make an alcoholic medicinal beverage.

An imori no kuroyaki or "blackened broiled Japanese Fire Belly Newt has popularly been ascribed aphrodisiac properties, though this animal has been found to contain tetrodotoxin, the deadly fugu poison. On a related note, certain beetles of the Spanish fly family are used in Traditional Chinese medicine but are toxic, and in ninja fiction, the beetle's poison has been portrayed as being used in assassinations.

Use of not just raw, but living animals might be considered a novel use of ingredients: shirouwo (Ice goby) and hotaruika (Sparkling enope squid) are swallowed while still alive and wiggling (this is called odori-gui). This is also a unique culture of Japan.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.