帆立 · ホタテ · hotate
Hotate
Hotate is scallop — the adductor muscle served raw for a sweet, creamy, melting bite. Hokkaido's are the gold standard for sashimi.
- Also known as
- scallop
- Species
- Mizuhopecten yessoensis (Yesso (Japanese) scallop)
- Category
- Shellfish & clams (kai)
- Texture
- soft, creamy — sweet, creamy, delicate
- Peak season
- Dec, Jan, Feb (farmed year-round)
- Sustainability
- varies — Japanese/Hokkaido scallops are often well-managed; ratings vary by method and region.
- Mercury
- Not in the FDA consumer table
- Pregnancy
- Eat in moderation
- Price tier
- $$
Sweet, creamy, clean
Hotate is scallop — specifically the large white adductor muscle, served raw as nigiri or sashimi. Good hotate is plump and faintly translucent, melting to a creamy sweetness that comes from its high glycogen and free amino acids. Hokkaido’s cold waters set the standard.
Raw, or barely touched
Most counters serve it raw to show off that natural sugar, though a light sear (aburi) with a brush of soy plays the sweetness against a little smoke. The frilly mantle (himo) and roe are sometimes served too — chewier, brinier, and not to be wasted.
A friendly luxury
Sweet, mild and entirely un-fishy, hotate is one of the easiest premium neta for newcomers — and a reliable read on a counter’s freshness.