🍱 Isazamame
Isaza-mame" is a tsukudani (food boiled in soy sauce) dish made by combining isaza, a type of goby endemic to Lake Biwa, and soybeans. Isaza-mame" is a local dish that has spread throughout the prefecture, especially in the Kohoku region. Isaza, which is harvested from September to April in autumn, winter and spring, and soybeans, which are so rich in protein and nutritious that they are called the meat of the field, go together very well, and are still made in every household. In the Kohoku region, isaza is an indispensable dish for weddings, funerals, and other ceremonial occasions that take place when isaza is harvested. Isaza is one of the representative seafoods of Lake Biwa and has been selected as one of the "Eight Delicacies of Lake Biwa. It lives at a depth of around 70 meters in Lake Biwa. It is small, about 7 centimeters long, but is characterized by its large head and mouth. It has a light, delicious flavor that goes well with dishes such as "junjun," a sukiyaki-like hot pot, and is often eaten in the same way as isaza beans. The catch of isaza is cyclical and fluctuates, but it is sold at roadside stations near fishing ports and at stores specializing in lake fish.