Popular main ingredients for sashimi include: • • • • • • • • • • • Some sashimi ingredients, such as octopus, are sometimes served cooked given their chewy nature. Most seafood, such as tuna, salmon, and squid, are served raw.
Tataki ('pounded') is a type of sashimi that is quickly and lightly
seared on the outside, leaving it raw inside.
Ingredients other than raw fish meat Food cut into small pieces and eaten with wasabi and soy sauce may be called sashimi in Japan, including the following ingredients. Like bamboo shoots, the food is eaten raw to appreciate the freshness, and producers and farmers offer those sashimi at their properties in top season. Some of the vegetables are eaten as thin sliced strips and called sashimi while they resemble fish meat, like avocado as salmon and konnyaku as puffer fish. Less common, but not unusual, sashimi ingredients are vegetarian items, such as
yuba (bean curd skin), and raw red meats, such as
beef or
horse (known as ).
Chicken "sashimi" (known as ) is considered by some to be a delicacy; the
Nagoya kōchin,
French poulet de Bresse and its American derivative, the
blue foot chicken, are favored by many for this purpose, as, besides their taste, they are certified to be free of
Salmonella. Chicken sashimi is sometimes slightly braised or seared on the outside. • Japanese
radish: among many varieties of vegetables eaten fresh, it is said that the flavor stands out when tasted within a couple of hours after harvesting, and called sashimi vegetables instead of very fresh salad. •
Konnyaku: cut into short thin strips resembling puffer fish meat, thus called (mountain puffer fish) in some regions. Served with vinegar and miso, wasabi and soy sauce, vinegar and soy sauce. •
Yuba, or tofu skin: while there are restaurants where customers cook their own yuba and eat while it is hot, yuba-sashi or sashimi of yuba is chilled and served with wasabi soy sauce or vinegar miso. ;Meat Beef, pork, and
poultry are bought from licensed butchers and processors and served raw or slightly cooked to avoid high risk of food poisoning and parasite infection. Meat may be treated in boiling water (yubiki) or braised with a gas torch (aburi). Served with
ponzu citrus vinegar. •
Chicken meat () is thinly sliced
Nagoya kōchin flesh, liver, heart and gizzard. • Chiragaa: boiled face skin of pork, served with vinegar and miso sauce, also served as Okinawa cuisine. •
Goat meat:
Okinawa cuisine, served with soy sauce and grated ginger. • Horse meat: offered with grated garlic and soy sauce. • Mimigaa: boiled ears of pork, also served as Okinawa cuisine. • Offal: advised to buy from meat processors or restaurants with licenses, as fatal food poisoning happened in Japan with beef liver. • Wild meat: boar as Okinawa cuisine consumed on
Iriomote and
Ishigaki islands and boiled meat is served. Deer meat. ;Others •
Fishcake: An item in the express menu of
Izakaya, offered as Itawasa. Sliced into thick strips, and eaten with wasabi and soy sauce. • Seaweed:
wakame is in strict sense not eaten raw but dipped in boiling water for a few seconds, and eaten with wasabi soy sauce. Marinating with vinegar and miso sauce is popular as well. File:Yagisashi Okinawa Naha.jpg|alt=Goat meat served raw as sashimi.|Goat meat served raw as sashimi File:JP-47 Mimiga and Chiraga.jpg|alt=Thinly sliced mimiga and chiraga served as sashimi.|Thinly sliced "" (near) and "" (far) File:Dolphin Sashimi.jpg|A plate of dolphin sashimi File:Basashi (15121111029).jpg|A plate of horse sashimi () File:Beef sashimi (4329731489).jpg|Beef sashimi File:Kurosatsumadori no aburi tataki.jpg|Chicken sashimi served lightly braised as
tataki File:レバ刺し.jpg|
Beef liver sashimi served with sesame seed oil and salt|alt=1 == Safety ==