· カニカマ · kanikama

Kanikama

Kanikama is imitation crab — surimi (usually pollock) shaped and dyed to mimic crab legs. It's what's in most 'crab' rolls, including the California roll. Not crab.

Also known as
imitation crab, krab, surimi, crab stick
Species
Gadus chalcogrammus (Surimi (usually Alaska pollock))
Category
Other & modern neta
Texture
springy, uniform — mild, lightly sweetened, processed
Peak season
Sustainability
green — Usually Alaska pollock, one of the better-managed wild fisheries — so 'fake crab' is often the more sustainable pick.
Mercury
Not in the FDA consumer table
Pregnancy
Generally safe
Price tier
$

What kanikama really is

Kanikama is surimi — a paste of mild white fish (almost always Alaska pollock), bound, flavored, dyed with a red stripe and formed into crab-leg shapes. Invented in Japan in the 1970s, it’s the “krab” in the vast majority of California rolls, spicy-crab rolls and crab salad.

Not a scam, but know what it is

Calling it “crab” on a menu is loose, but kanikama isn’t junk — it’s a legitimate, inexpensive product. The honest move is just knowing the difference: if a roll’s “crab” is uniform, springy and faintly sweet, it’s surimi, not kani.

The sustainability twist

Because it’s made from well-managed Alaska pollock, imitation crab is frequently the more sustainable choice than some real crab. See kani vs kanikama.

Related neta

See how Kanikama compares to similar neta →