秋刀魚 · サンマ · sanma
Sanma
Sanma is Pacific saury — the iconic oily fish of Japanese autumn. As sushi it's rich and bright; lately, warming seas have made it scarce and pricey.
- Also known as
- saury, mackerel pike
- Species
- Cololabis saira (Pacific saury)
- Category
- Silver / shiny fish (hikarimono)
- Texture
- soft, oily — rich, bright, briny
- Peak season
- Sep, Oct, Nov
- Sustainability
- varies — Pacific saury catches have fallen sharply in recent years amid shifting ocean conditions.
- Mercury
- Not in the FDA consumer table
- Pregnancy
- Eat in moderation
- Price tier
- $$
The taste of autumn
Its kanji literally reads “autumn sword fish,” and few foods say fall in Japan like sanma. Most often salt-grilled, when it’s impeccably fresh it’s also served as sushi — oily, rich and bright, with ginger and scallion to balance the fat.
A fish under pressure
Worth knowing: sanma has become scarce and expensive. Catches have fallen sharply over recent years as ocean conditions shift, turning what was once a cheap, everyman’s fish into a seasonal splurge — a small, edible signal of larger changes at sea. Among the shiny fish it sits beside summer’s aji and autumn’s saba.
Related neta
Aji
Aji is Japanese horse mackerel — a silver hikarimono served fresh (not cured), bright and clean with a little ginger and scallion. Summer's quintessential shiny fish.
鯖 sabaSaba
Saba is mackerel — a rich, oily hikarimono almost always cured in salt and vinegar (shime-saba) for flavor and safety. Bold and a little funky, in the best way.