Toggle Nav

Red Masago (Capelin Roe)

3237-015206-0.060000---EACH--No--No-No
3238-015207-0.125000-lb--EACH--No--No-No
3239-015208-0.249122---EACH--No--No-No
3240-015209-0.500000---EACH--No--No-No
15

Red Masago (Capelin Roe)

SKU: 015206P
Availability:In stock
Only %1 left
FROM $15

Masago caviar is prized in Japanese cuisine as a topping for maki sushi, nigiri, and sashimi, as well as a garnish for seafood dishes and salad dressings. Procured from capelin fish, a member of the smelt family, it’s often used as a smaller, softer, less costly substitute for Tobiko caviar. This Masago variant is imbued with a flaming red color, its semi-translucent, diminutive beads filled with a briny, mildly sweet and smoky flavor.

- +
Approximate shipping time is 1 business day
FEATURES

Capelin fish (Mallotus villosus, also known as caplin fish) are a small species and member of the smelt family, whose range extends throughout the far Northern Hemisphere’s oceanic waters. They are foragers and typically feed by grazing on plankton, krill swarms, and other small crustaceans. Capelin populations engage in sizable seasonal migrations, going south in the winter and spring towards the coasts in order to spawn and north in the summer and autumn to their feeding grounds at the peak of their productivity, near the Arctic ice shelves.

Thanks to their prodigal reproductive rates, capelin are abundant throughout their range. Their svelte, slender bodies make them desirable snacks to predatory fishes, cetaceans, seals, squids, and seabirds, forming the basis of a food chain that allows many such larger species to flourish (particularly cod, which are extensively dependent on the capelin as a food source). They are also commercially fished, largely in pursuit of fishmeal production but also for their desirable roe.

Capelin roe is commonly known as Masago and is slightly smaller and softer than flying fish roe, itself most widely known as Tobiko. Masago possesses a remarkably similar flavor profile to that of Tobiko, and due to the capelin’s widespread availability and resulting lower cost, it’s often considered an adequate substitute for Tobiko as a garnish or main ingredient in popular Japanese dishes, such as sashimi, sushi rolls, crab cakes, salmon fillets, and other seafood. Available in seven different wild-caught varieties (natural, orange, wasabi, red, golden, black, and ginger), these striking pearls will perfectly serve as a beautiful addition to authentic homemade sushi and canapés.

  • Accompaniments: East Asian seafood dishes.
Details
Delivery

DELIVERY & RETURNS

 
NEXT DAY DELIVERY

PRIORITY DELIVERY OPTIONS AVAILABLE FOR ALL ORDERS

 
QUALITY GUARANTEE

GUARANTEED FRESHNESS AND QUALITY OF PRODUCTS

 
SUPPORT AVAILABLE

THROUGH OUR CONTACT FORM OR BY PHONE DURING OUR HOURS

 
SINCE 1983

SUPPLYING CUSTOMERS WITH TRUSTED GOURMET FOOD PRODUCTS