Matière premièreIngrédients alimentaires

Shirasu (Juvenile Sardine)

しらす (しらす)

Pourquoi sourcer au Japon

Domestic Japanese semi-dried and fully-dried shirasu processing produces export-grade calcium-fortified retail products at scale.

Spec clé

Calcium 1,800-2,400 mg/100g dry; protein 60-70%; vitamin D 4-12 µg/100g; DHA / EPA preserved.

Produit fini typique

Fresh / semi-dried retail, calcium-fortified supplement, donburi / pasta retail toppers.

At a glance

Fournisseurs répertoriés
2 fournisseurs
MOQ typique
10–100 kg fresh-frozen; 5–25 kg semi-dried; 1–10 kg fully-dried
Délai typique
4–8 weeks
Régions d'origine
Shizuoka, Kanagawa, Wakayama, Hyogo, Kochi
Catégorie
Ingrédients alimentaires
Saison de récolte
March – November (peak May – September)
Statut réglementaire au Japon
Food product; mercury / methylmercury monitoring
Nom japonais
しらす
Romaji
しらす

À propos de cet ingrédient

Juvenile sardine and anchovy fry (typically <30mm), boiled and either eaten fresh, semi-dried (kama-age, chirimen), or fully-dried (chirimen-jako). Shizuoka, Kanagawa, Wakayama, Hyogo, and Kochi are the principal commercial harvest regions. Calcium-rich (~2,000 mg/100g dry) and increasingly used as a calcium-fortification ingredient in functional foods. Distinct from existing niboshi entry (which is a smaller-volume, larger-fish anchovy).

Statut réglementaire

JaponFood product; mercury / methylmercury monitoring
Union européenneFood import; fish-allergen labelling
États-UnisGRAS; FDA Prior Notice; fish-allergen labelling
ChineGACC food facility registration

Fournisseurs japonais

Se renseigner sur Shirasu (Juvenile Sardine)