大トロ · オオトロ · otoro

Otoro

Otoro is the fattiest cut of the tuna belly — densely marbled, pale pink, and rich enough to dissolve on the tongue. The prized luxury slice of edomae sushi.

Also known as
fatty tuna, toro
Species
Thunnus orientalis (Bluefin tuna (fattiest belly cut))
Category
Red-flesh fish (akami)
Texture
melting, buttery — intensely rich, marbled, melts on contact
Peak season
Nov, Dec, Jan, Feb
Sustainability
red — Almost always bluefin, which is heavily overfished.
Mercury
Not in the FDA consumer table
Pregnancy
Eat in moderation
Price tier
$$$$

The luxury cut

Otoro is the fattiest cut of the tuna belly — densely marbled, pale pink, and so rich it dissolves on contact with a warm tongue. It is the single most prized (and priciest) slice in edomae sushi.

How to eat it

Otoro needs almost nothing: a whisper of nikiri, body-temperature rice, and immediate eating before the fat warms past its prime. Lightly seared (aburi) otoro is a popular modern treatment that renders the fat fragrant.

Mercury and ethics

Otoro actually carries less mercury than lean akami — mercury concentrates in muscle, not fat. But it almost always comes from bluefin, which is heavily overfished and rated avoid by Seafood Watch. Enjoy it knowingly. Compare all three tuna cuts.

Related neta

See how Otoro compares to similar neta →