鰹 · カツオ · katsuo

Katsuo

Katsuo (skipjack bonito) is a deep-red, lean relative of tuna with a bold, irony flavor — classically seared as tataki. It marks two seasons: spring's first catch and autumn's fatty return.

Also known as
bonito, skipjack, tataki
Species
Katsuwonus pelamis (Skipjack tuna)
Category
Red-flesh fish (akami)
Texture
firm — bold, irony, smoky when seared
Peak season
Apr, May, Sep, Oct
Sustainability
varies — Pole-and-line skipjack is a Best Choice; purse-seine/FAD-caught rates lower.
Mercury
Not in the FDA consumer table
Pregnancy
Eat in moderation
Price tier
$$

Tuna’s bolder cousin

Katsuo is skipjack bonito — leaner, darker and more intensely iron-flavored than maguro. It’s most often served as tataki: the outside seared over straw or flame, the inside left raw, then dressed with grated ginger, garlic, myōga and ponzu to meet its boldness head-on.

A fish of two seasons

Katsuo defines the Japanese calendar twice. Hatsu-gatsuo — the first bonito of spring — is lean and clean, historically so coveted that Edoites would pawn possessions for the first slice. Modori-gatsuo — the “returning” autumn fish — comes back fat and rich after a summer of feeding.

Beyond sushi

Dried, smoked and fermented, katsuo becomes katsuobushi — the shavings whose smoky depth is the backbone of dashi, and therefore of Japanese cooking itself.

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