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Hatcho Miso Powder – Aged Umami Finishing Seasoning

Hatcho miso is one of Japan's most distinct ingredients — and one of the rarest in a professional kitchen's repertoire. Made from soybeans and salt only, it is fermented for a minimum of two years beneath a three-ton pyramid of hand-stacked river stones, pressing down on six tons of miso inside cedar barrels that have been in use for over a century.

The long fermentation and extreme pressure produce a miso that is dense, low in moisture, and deeply savory, with a faint astringency and strong notes of cocoa, coffee, and malt. It is precisely these dark aromatic qualities that draw pastry chefs and chocolatiers to it — the natural affinity with dark chocolate, caramel, and coffee opens creative territory well beyond the savory kitchen.

Maruya Hatcho Miso has been making hatcho miso in Okazaki, Aichi since 1337 — the oldest hatcho miso producer still operating in Japan. Their powder is not freeze-dried. Instead, they use a traditional warm-air and kneading method that is more labor-intensive than modern vacuum processes, but preserves more of the miso's aromatic character.

In powder form, hatcho miso does things a paste cannot. It dissolves instantly in both liquids and fats. It adds concentrated umami without moisture. It works as a dry rub, a crust element, or a finishing seasoning stirred in at the very end of a sauce.

Ayako Yuki, The House of Umami's Umami Curator, visited Maruya Hatcho Miso's brewery in Okazaki and toured the facility with President Shintaro Asai, confirming the production standards firsthand. We document every producer visit on Instagram.

Follow @thehouseofumami or @umamisource to see inside the breweries, farms, and workshops behind our products.

Soybeans, salt — Japan. No additives. Gluten-free.
Soybeans are sourced from the Mikawa region of Aichi Prefecture.

50g / 1.76 oz — kitchen trials and first use
1kg / 35.3 oz — regular kitchen use

Start with 0.5g per portion and taste as you go. This powder is concentrated — a small amount goes a long way. It dissolves quickly in both fat and liquid, and holds up well to heat.

As a finishing seasoning (add off-heat or after cooking)
• Butter sauces and beurre blanc: whisk in a small amount just before plating — adds depth without sweetness or extra moisture
• Vinaigrettes: dissolve in the oil before emulsifying — pairs especially well with aged sherry or red wine vinegar
• Compound butters: blend into softened butter with herbs or citrus zest for an instant umami base

As a cooking seasoning (heat-stable, holds up to cooking)
• Braises and reductions: stir in during the final stage — flavor concentrates without turning bitter
• Glazes: dissolve in mirin, sake, or honey for a savory, caramelized finish on roasted meat or vegetables
• Dry rubs and crusts: mix with salt, cracked pepper, and raw sugar; apply to beef, lamb, or duck before searing or roasting In pastry and chocolate (where it is particularly at home)
• Dark chocolate ganache and truffles: replace part of the salt with the powder — the cocoa and malt notes in the miso amplify the chocolate rather than competing with it
• Caramel and toffee: add a pinch at the final stage — shifts the flavor from simply sweet to layered and complex
• Ice cream and semifreddo: dissolve in warm cream before churning; works especially well with burnt caramel, coffee, and nut-based recipes
• Brown butter for baking: fold into beurre noisette before incorporating into financiers, madeleines, or tart shells

Important: Overuse results in saltiness rather than a complex umami flavor.
Precise measurement and gradual tasting are essential.

Store in a cool, dark place away from direct sunlight, heat, and humidity. After opening, seal tightly and refrigerate. Consume as soon as possible once opened.
Best before: 24 months from production date.