Kabosu Sudachi Japanese Acidic Citrus Varieties
Japan (kabosu — Oita Prefecture; sudachi — Tokushima Prefecture; regional identities inseparable from their citrus)
Japan's range of acidic citrus varieties beyond yuzu provides distinct flavour profiles for specific applications — kabosu (カボス, Citrus sphaerocarpa from Oita Prefecture) and sudachi (すだち, Citrus sudachi from Tokushima Prefecture) being the most important. Kabosu is a golf ball-sized green citrus harvested in late summer and autumn, with a complex, slightly bitter fragrance and balanced acidity — it is the signature citrus of Oita and is served alongside virtually every dish in the prefecture as a table squeeze. Its flavour sits between lime and yuzu with a distinctive herbal quality that makes it particularly excellent alongside grilled fish (sanma Pacific saury is the canonical pairing) and nabe hotpot. Sudachi is smaller (walnut-sized) and rounder with an intensely aromatic, clean, very high-acidity juice used in tiny amounts — the Tokushima signature citrus deployed in soba (sliced half placed alongside cold noodles), with dashi preparations, and as a vinegar substitute in ponzu. Both citrus fruits are used green (unripe) before they yellow, with the highest aromatic intensity at the green stage. A third variety, Kochi's yuzu, and Aomori's distinctive semi-wild citrus ota tangerine complete Japan's artisanal citrus palette. These citrus varieties represent terroir in fruit form — their distinctive characters are inseparable from specific regional cuisines.