· イクラ · ikura

Ikura

Ikura is salmon roe — large, glossy orange pearls that burst with briny richness, served as gunkanmaki. The name is borrowed from the Russian word for roe.

Also known as
salmon roe, sujiko
Species
Oncorhynchus spp. (Salmon roe)
Category
Roe & uni (gunkanmaki)
Texture
bursting pearls — briny, rich, pop
Peak season
Sep, Oct, Nov
Sustainability
varies — Depends on the salmon fishery; wild Alaskan salmon roe generally rates well.
Mercury
Not in the FDA consumer table
Pregnancy
Eat in moderation
Price tier
$$$

What ikura is

Ikura is salmon roe — large (5–7 mm), translucent orange spheres that pop between the teeth and flood the palate with briny, fatty richness. It’s almost always served as gunkanmaki, the nori-wrapped “battleship” that holds the loose pearls.

A borrowed name

The word ikura comes from the Russian ikra (“fish roe”), absorbed into Japanese in the early 20th century — a rare loanword neta.

Ikura vs sujiko

Ikura is separated into individual eggs; sujiko is the immature roe still bound in its membrane sac, saltier and more concentrated. Peak season is autumn, when salmon run to spawn. Good ikura pops cleanly — mushy or overly salty pearls are past their best. Compare the three roes.

Related neta

See how Ikura compares to similar neta →