Overview
Often overlooked for its cuisine, Fukui turns out to be a veritable culinary gem. The prefecture is home to some of the nation's best snow crab and soba buckwheat noodles. The sublime tastefulness of its sesame tofu and the powerful flavouring of its grilled mackerel show that the prefecture is also more than capable of covering all ends of the flavour spectrum. Here is a simple guide to some of the regional cuisine of Fukui.
Eihei-ji goma tofu
Famous as part of Japan's shojin ryori Buddhist cuisine, Eihei-ji goma tofu is a tofu variation made from kneaded goma sesame and kuzu arrowroot starch. Served in Fukui's famous Eihei-ji with the Zen temple's famous slightly sweet and creamy miso sauce, this dish is not only a spiritual delight but a culinary one as well.
Echizen oroshi soba
One of Japan's top 100 Rural Dishes, Echizen oroshi soba is Fukui prefecture's famous soba noodles in a bowl of dashi soup topped with a liberal amount of sliced daikon radish. Eaten in the region for over 400 years, the dish became nationally popular in the mid-twentieth century courtesy of the Emperor's fondness for the dish.
Echizen kanimeshi
Fukui's famous snow crab gets pride of place in Echizen kanimeshi, one of the region's most famous dishes. A bed of rice steamed with a mix of, yes, the innards of a female snow crab, is then topped with a liberal amount of the snow crab's sweet flavoured flesh. Hugely popular as an ekiben railway lunch box, Echizen kanimeshi is a proper delight to eat.
Saba bozushi
A type of sushi known as bozushi, the saba bozushi of Fukui is topped with the prefecture's own mackerel and fermented vegetables. The shape of the sushi is as if it were a rod, hence the name bozushi which means staff-sushi. Fukui's version is a more recent creation and is now so popular, it has become a staple dish of the region.