雲丹 · ウニ · uni
Uni
Uni is sea urchin — the sweet, briny, custard-rich gonad served raw as gunkanmaki. Quality ranges wildly, and that gap is the whole game.
- Also known as
- sea urchin roe, bafun uni, murasaki uni
- Species
- Strongylocentrotidae (Sea urchin (bafun & murasaki))
- Category
- Roe & uni (gunkanmaki)
- Texture
- creamy, custard-like — sweet, briny, oceanic, umami
- Peak season
- Jun, Jul, Aug, Dec, Jan
- Sustainability
- varies — Depends on species and fishery; some urchin harvests help control kelp-destroying populations.
- Mercury
- Not in the FDA consumer table
- Pregnancy
- Avoid (raw)
- Price tier
- $$$$
What uni is
Uni is sea urchin — specifically the animal’s gonads (often poetically called “tongues”), served raw, usually as gunkanmaki (“battleship” rolls) wrapped in nori. At its best it’s sweet, briny and custard-rich; at its worst, bitter and metallic. The gap between those two is the whole game.
Bafun vs murasaki
Two types dominate Japanese counters: bafun uni, smaller and deep orange with an intense, sweet richness, and murasaki uni, paler yellow and cleaner-tasting. Hokkaido is the prestige source.
Season and quality
Uni peaks in summer and again in winter depending on species and region. One nerd warning: lower-grade uni is often treated with alum to hold its shape, which leaves a bitter, ammonia-like off-note. Top counters serve untreated (muban) uni, which tastes markedly sweeter and cleaner.
Safety
Uni is very low in mercury, but it’s served raw — standard pregnancy guidance is to avoid raw seafood. Freshness is everything: good uni smells of clean ocean, never of ammonia.