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Motoi Kyoto Yuzu Hot Sauce

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$56.00

( save $7.00 ) Regular price $49.00
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Motoi Sauce is the creation of Michelin-starred chef Motoi Maeda — owner-chef of Restaurant MOTOÏ and MOTOI GYOZA, Kyoto. The sauce was born at the gyoza counter: Chef Maeda was developing a hot sauce to serve alongside gyoza for international guests when a Kyoto yuzu farmer reached out, looking for a buyer for a bumper harvest. Chef Maeda saw the opportunity, and Motoi Sauce began.

The yuzu comes from Mizuo — the birthplace of yuzu cultivation in Japan, a remote mountain village outside Kyoto where farming families have grown yuzu for centuries. Today, aging growers and rural depopulation have put the region's harvests under pressure. Chef Maeda buys directly from those farmers, and he uses every piece of fruit: misshapen, undersized, imperfect — nothing is turned away. The sauce is, in part, a commitment to sustaining those farms. 

Ayako, Umami Curator at The House of Umami, traveled to Mizuo with Chef Maeda and saw the harvest firsthand — the steep hillside orchards, the small crews working quickly through the short season, the boxes of fruit that wouldn't make the grade anywhere else. She came back with a clear sense of what was at stake. Carrying Motoi Sauce is her answer to that.

Whole yuzu — rind, pith, and fruit together — is processed into a paste that gives the sauce its viscosity and its aroma. No artificial thickeners. The body comes from the fruit itself. Add rice vinegar for clean acidity and natural preservation. Chili is selected as much for umami depth as heat, with soy sauce adding structure and length. Five ingredients, nothing more.

The fragrance releases on contact with warmth. A spoonful into pan sauce, a few drops over grilled fish, a dash through a nage at the last moment. It adapts to French, Italian, Japanese, and Chinese preparations with equal fluency.

Rice vinegar, yuzu (Kyoto Prefecture, Japan), chili pepper, soy sauce, salt. No additives.

Yuzu sourced directly from farming families in Mizuo, Ayabe, and Kyotanabe, Kyoto Prefecture, Japan. Whole yuzu — rind and fruit — processed into paste. No artificial preservatives or thickeners.

Contains: soy, wheat (soy sauce).

1-Bottle: 4.8 oz (135g)
Bundle of 2: 4.8 oz (135g) each

Shake well before use. A few drops finish a dish; a larger pour builds into the recipe.

Motoi Sauce was created for gyoza — and it remains on the table at MOTOI GYOZA in Kyoto every day. But the sauce long since outgrew its origin. The yuzu's floral acidity and the chili's slow heat make it equally at home in a French kitchen, an Italian pantry, or at a Japanese dinner table. The soy gives it a savory backbone that means it rarely needs additional seasoning when used as a finishing sauce.

Pairing notes
Fatty proteins, egg, and dairy benefit most from the yuzu's ability to cut richness cleanly. It also brightens lighter preparations — shellfish, white fish, raw plates — without overpowering them. Starches absorb the sauce well, while heat-forward dishes benefit from the layered chili profile.

Application by dish
• Gyoza and dumplings: the original use — a few drops directly, or mixed with ponzu as a composed dipping sauce
• Raw oysters and sashimi: in place of mignonette, or a few drops alongside a classic ponzu dipping base
• Grilled and pan-seared fish: scatter a few drops the moment the fish comes off heat; stir into a nage or beurre blanc in the final moments
• Poultry: deglaze the pan after searing with a splash, then mount with butter for a quick pan sauce; finish tableside on roast chicken or duck
• Hot pot, oden, and simmered dishes: add to the broth or serve as a dipping condiment alongside — the heat of the broth opens the yuzu aroma
• Pasta and risotto: add a dash off-heat to sharpen the finish — particularly effective with cream or butter sauces
• Egg dishes (soft-scrambled, chawanmushi, omelette): finish tableside; acidity and gentle heat cut through richness cleanly
• Karaage, fried chicken, and tempura: dress immediately after frying so the heat releases the yuzu fragrance
• Steak, pork, and lamb: drizzle over the resting cut, or serve tableside as a finishing sauce
• Japanese curry: stir in a spoonful just before serving — the yuzu lifts the richness of the roux and the chili deepens the spice
• Salads and cold plates: whisk into a dressing with sesame oil or olive oil; a few drops over a carpaccio

Seasoning tip: Motoi Sauce is low-sodium by design. Season your dish first, then use the sauce to finish — it amplifies without competing with your seasoning.

Shake well before use.
Store in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight. Refrigerate after opening. Consume as soon as possible once opened to preserve peak aroma and flavor.

Best before: 12 months from production date. No additives — shelf life maintained naturally through rice vinegar acidity.