FERMENTO · SOIA E LEGUMI

Red miso (Sendai)

仙台味噌sendai miso (also: 赤味噌 aka-miso for the general red-miso category)

Miso rosso stagionato in stile Sendai — ricco di sale, povero di koji, fermentato 12-18 mesi per umami profondo

Tempo di fermentazione 12-18 months minimum; some producers age 2 years
Intervallo di temperatura Ambient cellar temperature with seasonal variation — 10-25°C across the year; the temperature cycling is part of the flavor development
Sale / salamoia 10-13% — high salt required for the long fermentation timeline
Difficoltà Moderato
Importanza Consolidato
Avviso di traduzione

Il testo principale di questa pagina è disponibile solo in inglese nella v1. L'interfaccia e i metadati sono tradotti in italiano. La traduzione editoriale è prevista per la v2.

Profilo

Sendai miso is the classic Tohoku (northeast Japan) red miso, characterized by a koji-to-soybean ratio closer to 1:1 (notably lower than saikyo), higher salt for preservation through long aging, and 12-18 months of fermentation that develops the deep brown-red color and intense umami the category is known for.

The long fermentation drives Maillard reactions and amino-acid breakdown that produce the characteristic flavor: glutamate (the primary umami compound) plus aspartate, alanine, leucine, and others form during the slow protein breakdown by koji proteases. The dark color comes from non-enzymatic browning of these amino acids combined with the residual sugars over the months of aging. Compared to saikyo, Sendai miso is roughly 10x more umami-dense, 3-5x saltier, and structurally meant for different culinary applications.

Sendai miso is the canonical 'miso soup miso' for much of Japan — its strong character provides the backbone flavor that dashi and tofu and seaweed can be layered onto. It is also used in miso ramen, traditional Sendai stews, and as the base for miso dare (miso-based sauces). The Tohoku tradition extends to other regional red misos (Tsugaru in Aomori, Aizu in Fukushima) that share the general approach with regional variations.

The historical origin story is military: Sendai miso's reputation as an army provisions food dates to Date Masamune's reign in the 17th century, when the Sendai domain required a stable, transportable, protein-rich food for soldiers. The high salt and long aging that define the style emerged partly from these preservation requirements. The miso-making infrastructure built then (Sendai's miso warehouses, the regional logistics) has continuous-tradition descendants operating today.

Tecniche chiave

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Riferimenti incrociati