鯛 · タイ · tai

Tai

Tai (madai) is red sea bream — Japan's celebratory white fish: firm, clean, subtly sweet, best in spring. Often called 'red snapper' on menus, but it's a different fish.

Also known as
madai, sea bream, snapper
Species
Pagrus major (Red sea bream (madai))
Category
White-flesh fish (shiromi)
Texture
firm — clean, subtly sweet, elegant
Peak season
Mar, Apr, May (farmed year-round)
Sustainability
varies — Much tai is farmed in Japan; wild and farmed both vary by operation.
Mercury
Not in the FDA consumer table
Pregnancy
Eat in moderation
Price tier
$$$

The auspicious fish

Tai — specifically madai, red sea bream — is the celebratory fish of Japan, served at weddings and New Year because its name rides inside medetai (“auspicious”). The flesh is firm, pale and elegantly sweet, the benchmark shiromi. It peaks in spring as sakura-dai, “cherry-blossom bream.”

It is not “red snapper”

English menus love to call tai “red snapper,” but madai (Pagrus major) is not snapper (Lutjanus). That matters: snapper is the single most-mislabeled fish in Oceana’s testing — only a handful of “red snapper” samples were genuine. If you want true tai, ask for madai by name.

How to eat it

Clean and delicate, tai rewards restraint — a little salt and citrus, or a brief kelp cure. It’s a fish that flatters a skilled hand rather than hiding behind sauce.

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