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Wasabi Wasabi (Japanese: , , or , ; ''Eutrema japonicum'' or ''Wasabia japonica'') or Japanese horseradish is a plant of the family Brassicaceae, which also includes horseradish and mustard in other genera. The plant is native to Japan and the Russian ...
() is a variety of
wasabi Wasabi (Japanese: , , or , ; ''Eutrema japonicum'' or ''Wasabia japonica'') or Japanese horseradish is a plant of the family Brassicaceae, which also includes horseradish and mustard in other genera. The plant is native to Japan and the Russian ...
cultivated in Hikimi Town (now part of Masuda City),
Shimane Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūgoku region of Honshu. Shimane Prefecture is the second-least populous prefecture of Japan at 665,205 (February 1, 2021) and has a geographic area of 6,708.26 km2. Shimane Prefecture borders Yamaguc ...
,
Japan Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north ...
. Wasabi cultivation in Hikimi began in 1818 and by the early
Shōwa era The was the period of Japanese history corresponding to the reign of Emperor Shōwa ( Hirohito) from December 25, 1926, until his death on January 7, 1989. It was preceded by the Taishō era. The pre-1945 and post-war Shōwa periods are almos ...
(1926–1989) reached an annual production of 300 metric tons (330.7 US tons). Of the wasabi from Shimane, 90% came from the town of Hikimi『知ってる!?しまね うまいもの編』(匹見わさび)
- 一般社団法人移住・交流推進事業
At the time, Shimane Prefecture was one of the top producers of wasabi in Japan. The two top areas of wasabi production were
Shizuoka Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūbu region of Honshu. Shizuoka Prefecture has a population of 3,637,998 and has a geographic area of . Shizuoka Prefecture borders Kanagawa Prefecture to the east, Yamanashi Prefecture to the northea ...
in the East and Shimane Prefecture in the West. Hikimi's wasabi production declined due to numerous factors, including two large
flood A flood is an overflow of water ( or rarely other fluids) that submerges land that is usually dry. In the sense of "flowing water", the word may also be applied to the inflow of the tide. Floods are an area of study of the discipline hydrol ...
s since the 1970s, recent generations of farming families choosing different careers, and
global warming In common usage, climate change describes global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its effects on Earth's climate system. Climate change in a broader sense also includes previous long-term changes to E ...
. In recent years, new residents of Hikimi have been attempting to revive the production of Hikimi wasabi.益田の匹見ワサビにペースト商品 手軽に本物の味
- 朝日新聞デジタル島根版(2014年12月20日)
In 2013, Shimane Prefecture produced 74.5 metric tons of wasabi (70.2 metric tons were soil-grown wasabi, 4.3 metric tons were water-grown wasabi). That is fifth most in Japan, but far behind the top 3 prefectures: Shizuoka (867.6 metric tons),
Nagano Nagano may refer to: Places * Nagano Prefecture, a prefecture in Japan ** Nagano (city), the capital city of the same prefecture *** Nagano 1998, the 1998 Winter Olympics *** Nagano Olympic Stadium, a baseball stadium in Nagano *** Nagano Universi ...
(604.7 metric tons), and Iwate (432.7 metric tons).
Shimane Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūgoku region of Honshu. Shimane Prefecture is the second-least populous prefecture of Japan at 665,205 (February 1, 2021) and has a geographic area of 6,708.26 km2. Shimane Prefecture borders Yamaguc ...
is known for its Hikimi wasabi. Due to this small amount, Hikimi wasabi is now considered to be fairly rare.


Climate

Japan, except for the Hokkaido region, is in the subtropical high-pressure belt, a unique area in the world rich in water despite being located at a latitude which often is desert. When winter comes, rainfall often turns into snowfall, and the Japan Sea side of the main island Honshū has one of the highest amounts of snow at that latitude or lower in the world. Hikimi is located in the southwestern tip of this heavy snow fall area in Japan. Snow acts as insulation to help protect wasabi from frost during the winter. Snow also functions as a natural dam, keeping water plentiful, which is good for growing wasabi. Hikimi is also humid and, being in the mountains, has fewer daylight hours throughout the year. A species native to Japan, wasabi was originally distributed mainly around the Japan Sea side of Honshū. It grows much better in areas with high humidity and short daylight hours than in areas with strong sunlight and high temperatures. With all these favorable factors existing in Hikimi, wasabi grows naturally and has been used by the local people since before it was farmed矢富熊一郎『石見匹見町史』島根郷土史会、1965年8月15日 chiro Aragami "History of Iwami Tomimi Town" Shimane Regional History Association/ref> In terms of climate, Hikimi is the best place for wasabi cultivation, but there are concerns about the future of wasabi production in Hikimi.『中国山地』中国新聞社、1967年2月30日 It is said that the average global rise in temperature is 0.68 °C per 100 years (1.22 °F), but the temperature of Hikimi rose 1.1 °C (1.98 °F) in the past 100 years. This means that ideal conditions for wasabi cultivation rose 200 meters in that time, since temperatures decrease at a rate of 0.55 °C per 100 meters. In the past, top-quality wasabi could be harvested even in the lower areas. However, the water temperature gradually has been rising since World War II, and the warmer temperatures have resulted in more damage to the crops from insects. Some farmers are trying to avoid disease and pests by farming fields at higher elevations,『新中国山地』中国新聞社、1986年8月30日 New China Mountain" China News Agency, August 30, 1986/ref> but soon they will run out of land to move up to. Moreover, on the Japan Sea side, in recent years there have been torrential rainstorms at a scale never seen before. These large storms wash away wasabi plants and sometimes devastate entire farms.


Cultivation


Water-grown cultivation

In Hikimi, water-grown wasabi is commonly grown on farms in the ''Keiryū'' style (, ', "mountain–stream style").星谷佳功『ワサビ』 農山漁村文化協会(新特産シリーズ)、1996年 The water comes from the
Takatsu River The Takatsu River is a river in Shimane Prefecture, Japan. References

Rivers of Shimane Prefecture Rivers of Japan {{Japan-river-stub ...
system, which is one of the cleanest rivers in Japan. The Tatami-ishi style ( ', "paving-stone style") is the main style used in Shizuoka, and the Heichi style ( ', "flatland style") in Nagano. These use spring water as a source and are usually constructed on a large scale using heavy machinery in easily accessible locations. On the other hand, ''Keiryū''-style fields use water mainly from mountain streams. The fields are built on a small-scale by hand along mountain streams, making full use of the natural features of the landscape. To access the Keiryu Style fields, people need to be excellent mountain hikers, because the fields are located in difficult to access places「”幻の匹見わさび”を食す」『カートピア』2014年6月号、 富士重工業 カートピア編集室、2014年


Water-grown wasabi traits


Slow growth

Slow growth"Wasabi of the dikes" Masuda-shi production pamphlet,『ひきみのワサビ』益田市製作パンフレット、2015/03/03閲覧 owes to ''Keiryū''-style cultivation being exceedingly connected to the natural environment. The temperature of spring water (ground water) has little variation year-round. On the other hand, mountain stream water is always exposed to the elements, so the temperature is easily affected by the outside temperature. For that reason, the water temperature in ''Keiryū''-style farming changes significantly according to the season. The water temperature range to grow wasabi is as narrow as 8 to 18.6 °C (the ideal temperature is 12 to 13 °C), and growth stops if it is higher or lower than that. Therefore, water-grown wasabi in ''Keiryū''-style fields goes through periods of growth and rest similar to annual growth rings on trees.


Flavor and appearance

The flavor and appearance of Hikimi wasabi are described as: # Mild sweetness spreading after a sharp pungent flavor # Rich in aroma and with a viscous texture # Grated color is light green. (Native species are mostly yellow or white.) Regarding this sweetness, Hoshi Norimitsu, a former executive chef of the Hotel Okura, stated: "Hikimi Wasabi is not only posses a strong pungency, but also contains sweetness in the sharpness. I think it is because Hikimi wasabi spends time in snow. Well ... people have said for years that Japanese radish (daikon) which is preserved in the snow is sweeter. Wasabi is the same."天野礼子『日本一の清流で見つけた未来の種』 中央公論新社、2015年 The viscosity of wasabi is believed to help retain pungency and flavor compounds after being grated, and keeps its quality longer.横木国臣・上野良一『ワサビ』 農山漁村文化協会(新特産シリーズ)、1980年金印わさび機能性研究所『 健康・美容わさびレシピ』辰巳出版 2013年1月 18頁 At the same time, wasabi goes well as a sushi topping or in a sushi rice ball. For example, watery sushi toppings such as herring roe or abalone easily slide from a sushi rice ball, but wasabi makes sushi toppings hard to slide down. Viscous Hikimi wasabi works especially well. Regarding the color of grated wasabi, residents of Tokyo prefer the deep green wasabi produced in Shizuoka Prefecture, whereas residents of the Keihanshin region (the Kyoto–Osaka–Kobe area) prefer the light green wasabi produced in Shimane Prefecture. The largest company of processed wasabi manufactures and sells two different colors of powdered wasabi for business use. One is the western Japan style, and the other is eastern Japan style. The western Japan style of wasabi is lighter colored than wasabi from eastern Japan.


Farm-grown cultivation

Farm-grown wasabi is mainly grown on the slopes of forests where broad-leaved trees grow. The broad-leaf trees naturally adjust the sunlight suitable for growth of wasabi by blocking strong sunlight in the summer, and allowing weak sunlight through after the leaves fall in the winter. The fields are made at various altitudes from 250 meters to 1100 meters above sea level. By farming at different altitudes at the same time, farmers can harvest over a wider period of time.


Revival efforts

To revive wasabi cultivation in Hikimi, the following institutions and measures are being conducted. ; Wasabi Bio-center : This institution produces seedlings of elite breeds. It is located at the former site of the branch in Hikimi. This institution is equipped with an air-controlled laboratory, a breeder room with various equipment, and equipment to keep bacteria out. ; Wasabi College Hikimi : This approach is planned and sponsored by the local administration with the aim of getting people interested in agriculture and rural life, finding new farmers, and promoting settlement. Some participants of the college moved to Hikimi to farm.


Gallery

File:Wasabi Field in Hikimi, Shimane, Japan in Summer.jpg, ''Keiryū''-style fields. This style is widely used around the Chūgoku Mountains: Shimane, Yamaguchi, Hyogo, Okayama, and Hiroshima Prefectures. It is therefore also called the ''Chūgokusankei'' system. The fields are made along mountain streams using the natural geographical features. File:Wasabi Field in Hikimi, Shimane, Japan in Winter.JPG, When it snows, flowing water usually melts the snow, but sometimes the fields are covered with snow. File:Repair Hikimi Wasabi Fields By Hand.jpg, Repairing ''Keiryū''-style wasabi fields. The fields are mostly located in places heavy machinery cannot access, so farmers usually maintain the fields by hand. File:Access To Wasabi Field in Hikimi, Shimane, Japan.JPG, A farmer going to his wasabi fields to harvest. He sometimes must walk more than one hour to reach the fields on rough slopes of mountain trails along the valley. All he brings is a basket to carry the harvested wasabi. File:Harvest Hikimi Wasabi 2 of 1.JPG, A farmer's wife, helping her husband to harvest Hikimi wasabi. Her husband digs up wasabi, and she prepares them for shipment.


Breed varieties

Shimane is one of the main breed varieties and is cultivated in both water fields and soil fields. Shimane was developed by Dr. Yokogi Kuniomi of Shimane Prefecture's Agricultural Experiment Station with the cooperation of Kenjirō Tanaka, a farmer in Nichihara Town (now part of Tsuwano Town) in 1942.横木国臣先生喜寿記念刊行会『喜寿と回想』島根県農業試験場、1980年11月21日 It is the only superior variety found to be resistant to the putrefaction disease which destroys wasabi cultivation, and it saved the wasabi industry in Shimane Prefecture. For water-grown wasabi only, in addition to local species native to Hikimi, there is Daijin, which is bred from native varieties from elsewhere in Japan. Misawa, which was developed in 2002, is used for soil-grown wasabi only.


Processed products

Processed products of water-grown wasabi include additive‐free wasabi paste, Japanese yam paste mixed with wasabi, sausages containing wasabi, and other things. Soil-grown wasabi is used mainly to make wasabi paste. Soil-grown wasabi's leaves, stems, and flower parts are also used as ingredients of pickled products such as ''shōyu-zuke'' (soy sauce pickles), ''sakekasu-zuke'' (pickles in sake lees), ''miso-zuke'' (miso pickles), and sweets such as ice cream and pudding. Wasabi shoots (known locally as ''ganime'') with good texture are used especially for ''shōyu-zuke''.


Culture


Yamaoi-Tengu-Sha shrine

Yamaaoi-Tengu-Sha shrine is the only shrine dedicated to wasabi in which wasabi farmers pray for a good harvest in Japan.匹見町誌編さん委員会『匹見町誌』 山陰中央新報社、2007年6月 The shrine is located halfway up Mount Daijingataki, 1170 meters (3838 feet) above sea level, in the town of Hikimi, Mikazura District. This town is regarded as the birthplace of Hikimi Wasabi. The shrine's ''goshintai'' (object of worship) is a carved ''
tengu are a type of legendary creature found in Japanese folk religion (Shinto). They are considered a type of ''yōkai'' (supernatural beings) or Shinto ''kami'' (gods). The ''Tengu'' were originally thought to take the forms of birds of prey and a ...
'' with a round fan dedicated to the shrine.


Wasabi Kagura

Iwami Kagura is a traditional performance art of western Shimane Prefecture. In modern times, a Kagura play has been created by locals to pray for a good wasabi harvest.New Wasabi Kagura' Wasabi praying for harvesting and dedicating tomorrow" ''Sanin Chuo Shimpo'', June 4, 1983.『新作「ワサビ神楽」ワサビの豊作祈願しあす奉納』 山陰中央新報 1983年6月4日 Nishida Tamotsu created the wooden masks. Watanabe Tomochiyo, who is a researcher of Iwami Kagura and ethnology, created the words, and the Mikazura Kagura Preservation Society, all members of which are wasabi farmers, created the choreography. The title "Yamaaoi Tengu" was named after the official name of the Wasabi Shrine. The performance was first performed at the Shrine on June 5, 1983. The Wasabi Kagura has continued to be performed since then. The story goes that a
tengu are a type of legendary creature found in Japanese folk religion (Shinto). They are considered a type of ''yōkai'' (supernatural beings) or Shinto ''kami'' (gods). The ''Tengu'' were originally thought to take the forms of birds of prey and a ...
, an object of worship of the shrine, slays disease and insects (in anthropomorphized forms) to save suffering wasabi farmers. The story is performed by members of the Mikazura Kagura Preservation Society. The group has been designated as a Shimane prefectural intangible folk cultural property. The story is performed at a unique Rokuchōshi tempo.


''Uzume-meshi''

Cuisine using wasabi has existed in the town of Hikimi since the Middle Ages. Most notably, ''uzume-meshi'' was selected as one of the "Five Great Japanese Rice Meals" in a nationwide survey of local cuisine, conducted by the
Imperial Household Agency The (IHA) is an agency of the government of Japan in charge of state matters concerning the Imperial Family, and also the keeping of the Privy Seal and State Seal of Japan. From around the 8th century AD, up until the Second World War, it ...
.島根県広聴広報課『シマネスク No.103 2017 Spring 「うずめ飯」』、2017年3月 himane Prefecture Public Information Division "Shimanesque No. 103, Spring 2017: Uzume-meshi", March 2017/ref> ''Uzume-meshi'' looks like a simple bowl of rice, but when the rice is removed with chopsticks, chicken, taro, burdock, carrots, nameko mushrooms, and other ingredients appear in a broth under the rice. ''Uzume'' means "to fill up", and ''meshi'' means "rice". It is said that ''uzume-meshi'' was named after how the dish is arranged.『現代農業 1月増刊「うかたま」 雪舟山荘のうずめめし』
農文協 2005年12月5日発売 ontemporary Agriculture January supplement "Ukatama", Uzume-meshi from Sesshō Sansō (guesthouse), December 5, 2005/ref> In Hikimi, it is said that Uzume-meshi was eaten as part of a feast when guests visited a house for ceremonial occasions, such as visits from bureaucrats, festivals, or the New Year's holiday. Its origins are unknown, but there are three origin stories: # Wasabi long ago was so expensive that if farmers sold some, they could earn enough money to live for a month. Therefore, wasabi was hidden under the rice to prevent their guests from feeling apprehensive by seeing they were being served such expensive food. # Hosts were embarrassed by putting such cheap vegetables on rice, so they hid the ingredients under the rice. # In ancient times,
copper pheasant The copper pheasant or Soemmerring's pheasant (''Syrmaticus soemmerringii'') is endemism, endemic to Japan. The scientific name commemorates the Germany, German scientist Samuel Thomas von Sömmerring. Description It is a large pheasant with a ...
was a source of protein for the local people. In the
Edo period The or is the period between 1603 and 1867 in the history of Japan, when Japan was under the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate and the country's 300 regional '' daimyo''. Emerging from the chaos of the Sengoku period, the Edo period was characteriz ...
, an edict forbidding the harming of living things came into effect, so people began to hide the ingredients under the rice so as not to get in trouble. The ingredients vary in homes and restaurants, but the common elements are ''shirukakegohan'' (rice mixed with broth) and wasabi. ''Uzume-meshi'' is served at local restaurants,うずめ飯
津和野町 2015年4月30日閲覧
and is also provided at the rest stop of a local bicycle race, Masuda I・NA・KA Ride. Riders can ride through the 100 kilometer course, starting from the Iwami Airport runway and passing through various local roads without traffic lights. Uzume-meshi appeared in the Japanese comic series ''
Oishinbo is a long-running Japanese cooking manga series written by and drawn by . The manga's title is a portmanteau of the Japanese word for delicious, ''oishii'', and the word for someone who loves to eat, ''kuishinbo''. The series depicts the ...
''.小学館「美味しんぼ」第8話(新妻の手料理)
2016年10月20日閲覧


Mascot

In 2011, the mascot Wasamaru, inspired by the shape of wasabi, was designed as a promotional tool for settlement in Masuda city.
- 朝日新聞デジタル島根版2015年1月16日


Notes


References

{{reflist Plant breeding Japanese cuisine terms Eutrema Japanese condiments