Empress Jingu’s menu
Hyōrō (field rations, crossing provisions)

Katauo — dried and salted fish for the great voyage

TravelReconstruction🍄 🧂 🫙moyen30 min work (+ 1 to 2 days drying)

Thin strips of fish (bonito or mackerel) salted and dried in wind and sun until hard as wood and intensely flavored. They are nibbled as-is at sea, or soaked to flavor a broth. The journey made edible.

Hyōrō (field rations, crossing provisions)

Thin strips of fish (bonito or mackerel) salted and dried in wind and sun until hard as wood and intensely flavored. They are nibbled as-is at sea, or soaked to flavor a broth. The journey made edible.

When you cut through the sea toward a distant land, you need provisions that neither water nor time can spoil. I carried a cold stone against my loins to hold the child, and in the holds, this fish hard as pebbles. Slice it thin, rub it with salt in full hands, then give it to the salt wind and sun until it sounds hollow. At sea, we gnaw it thus; on land, we let it yield its soul in hot water to warm the men. That is how a fleet crosses without faltering.
Empress Jingu
Ingredients
  • Fresh bonito or mackerelone fish (preserved ingredient)
  • Sea saltabundantly (preservative)
How it was made : Before the noble fermentation of katsuobushi (a later development), fish was simply preserved by salting and prolonged drying: "katauo" (hard fish). Light, non-perishable and rich in umami, it was the ration for maritime and military expeditions of the archipelago.