🍱 Abuttekamo (Salt-grilled Chromis)
"Abuttekamo" is salt-roasted damselfish mainly eaten in the coastal areas of Fukuoka City. It is characterized by the aroma of the skin and scales and the slight bitterness of the liver. The damselfish is a small fish with a body length of about 10 cm and is found widely in the Sea of Japan. There are few regions that actively eat it because it has many small bones and a thin body. In some regions, it was called “kajikiri” because it was so prolific that it interfered with the movement of ships when it was in season and was not welcomed very much. The Genkai Sea, which is close to Hakata Bay, has long been a good fishing ground where the Kuroshio Current, which is rich in nutrients, joins. Around the end of the Meiji era, a large amount of damselfish sometimes flowed in there. Damselfish were scooped up in order to secure the course of the ship, but they were difficult to dispose of, so they were sprinkled with salt and roasted later on, at which time it was discovered that they were fatty and delicious, and since then, they have been roasted and eaten. It is said that this came to be recognized as a specialty of Hakata after entering the Showa era when it began to be served at restaurants. It is said that the name of the dish is derived from the Japanese phrase for “let's roast and bite into it” or the opinion that it has the umami of duck when roasted.