Japanese term referring to rare food delicacies
Chinmi: Salt-pickled mullet roe (karasumi )
Chinmi (珍味 ) is a Japanese term meaning literally "rare taste", but more appropriately "delicacy ". They are local cuisines that have fallen out of popularity or that are peculiar to a certain area. Many involve pickled seafood .[citation needed ] [ 1] [unreliable source ] [failed verification ] [ 2] [unreliable source ] [failed verification ]
List of chinmi
Hizunamasu
Ikanankotsu – Cooked soft bones of squid
Kankai – Dried Komai fish. It may be eaten as is, or broiled and eaten with a sauce made by mixing mayonnaise and soy sauce and sprinkles of red pepper powder.
Kirikomi
Matsumaezuke
Mefun
Saketoba – A smoked salmon
Tachikama
Uni
Awabi no Kimo – Ground internal organs of abalone
Donpiko – The heart of a salmon. As only one can be taken from a fish, it is very rare.
Hoya – sea pineapple
Momijizuke – Shreds of fresh salmons and Ikura pickled together
Tonburi – A speciality of Akita prefecture . The dried seeds of the hosagi plant.
Ankimo – Either fresh or steamed liver of an Anko fish
Kusaya – Dried and pickled fish of Izu islands
Tofuyo
Umibudo – A type of edible seaweed with tiny seeds that hang from its stems
See also
References
Shushoku
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