穴子 · アナゴ · anago

Anago

Anago is saltwater conger eel — the lighter, more delicate eel of true edomae sushi, simmered soft and brushed with sweet tsume. Not unagi.

Also known as
conger eel, sea eel
Species
Conger myriaster (Whitespotted conger)
Category
Simmered & cooked (nimono)
Texture
fluffy, delicate — light, sweet tsume, melts
Peak season
Jun, Jul, Aug
Sustainability
varies — Generally a sounder choice than the endangered freshwater unagi, but varies by fishery.
Mercury
Not in the FDA consumer table
Pregnancy
Generally safe
Price tier
$$

The edomae eel

Anago is saltwater conger eel — the eel that actually belongs to traditional edomae sushi. It’s simmered until meltingly soft, then brushed with sweet tsume (a reduction of the cooking broth) or simply finished with a pinch of salt.

Lighter than unagi

Where unagi is dense, sweet and lacquered, anago is delicate, fluffy and clean — a connoisseur’s eel. A great piece practically collapses under the chopsticks.

Sourcing

Anago is generally a sounder choice than the endangered freshwater unagi, though sustainability still varies by fishery. If a counter just says “eel,” ask which one — see anago vs unagi.

Related neta

See how Anago compares to similar neta →