飛子 · トビコ · tobiko
Tobiko
Tobiko is flying-fish roe — the tiny, crunchy orange beads on the outside of rolls. Mild and smoky-sweet, and often tinted: wasabi green, squid-ink black, yuzu gold.
- Also known as
- flying fish roe
- Species
- Exocoetidae (Flying fish roe)
- Category
- Roe & uni (gunkanmaki)
- Texture
- tiny crunch — crisp, mild, smoky-sweet
- Peak season
- —
- Sustainability
- unrated — Flying fish roe is rarely assessed; sourcing varies.
- Mercury
- Not in the FDA consumer table
- Pregnancy
- Eat in moderation
- Price tier
- $
What tobiko is
Tobiko is flying-fish roe — the small (under 1 mm), crunchy beads that coat the outside of uramaki rolls and crown gunkanmaki. The texture is the point: a fine, popping crispness, with a mild, smoky-sweet flavor.
The colors
Natural tobiko is orange, but it takes dye and flavor beautifully: wasabi turns it green and spicy, squid ink black, yuzu pale gold, beet red. Those rainbow beads on a fancy roll are almost always tobiko.
Tobiko vs masago
Tobiko is crunchier, larger and pricier than masago (capelin roe), which is its most common stand-in. If the beads are soft and tiny with little pop, you’re probably eating masago. See the three roes compared.
Related neta
Masago
Masago is capelin (smelt) roe — smaller, softer and cheaper than tobiko, and the roe most often substituted for it. Mild, faintly bitter, usually dyed orange.
ikuraIkura
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.