Aspergillus oryzae (koji)
学名: Aspergillus oryzae
曲霉(米曲) — 日本指定的"国菌",由野生 Aspergillus flavus 驯化而来,选育出高酶产量、无毒素的菌株
本页正文在 v1 版本中仅以英文提供。界面与元数据已翻译为中文。v2 将进行专业编辑翻译。
关于此菌种
Aspergillus oryzae is the most important fungus in East Asian fermentation traditions and one of the most consequential domesticated microorganisms in human history. It was designated kokkin (国菌, 'national microbe' or 'national fungus') of Japan by the Brewing Society of Japan in 2006 — a recognition that no microorganism is more central to Japanese cuisine and traditional industry.
The species is a domesticated descendant of wild Aspergillus flavus, a soil fungus that historically and currently produces aflatoxin — one of the most carcinogenic substances known. Over centuries of selection by Japanese fermenters (initially through unconscious choice of healthy starter cultures, later through deliberate strain maintenance), the food-grade A. oryzae lineage lost the genes encoding aflatoxin biosynthesis. Modern industrial A. oryzae is verified non-toxigenic by genomic testing; the kōji-kin spore suppliers (Cold Mountain, GEM Cultures, Higuchi Matsunosuke Shoten, Akita Konno) sell strains certified safe.
Functionally, A. oryzae is a workhorse enzyme producer. When grown on a starch substrate (steamed rice, barley, soybeans), it secretes copious amylase (breaking starch into fermentable sugars), protease (breaking protein into peptides and free amino acids — producing umami), and lipase (breaking fats). These enzymes prepare the substrate for downstream fermentation by other organisms: Saccharomyces cerevisiae sake yeast can ferment koji-saccharified rice; lactic acid bacteria can ferment koji-pre-digested soybeans; the amino acids contribute the umami that defines koji-based products.
The koji-making process is itself a careful fermentation. Steamed rice or barley is inoculated with kōji-kin spores (typically 0.1-1% by weight), spread thinly on cedar trays or open vessels, and incubated at 28-35°C with controlled humidity (75-85%) for 36-48 hours. The mycelium grows visibly white through and on the substrate, fluffing the grain. Skilled koji makers turn the substrate periodically to redistribute moisture and prevent dense mat formation that would block oxygen. The finished koji has a slightly sweet, chestnut-like aroma; over-aged koji develops greenish-gray spores and a bitter taste.
Koji's downstream applications are extensive: sake (rice koji + cooked rice + Saccharomyces), miso (rice/barley/soybean koji + cooked soybeans + salt + aging), shoyu (rice or wheat koji + cooked soybeans + salt brine + aging), amazake (rice koji + water, no alcohol), mirin (rice koji + sweet rice + shochu spirit). Each application uses the same fundamental enzyme suite differently.
Western interest in koji has been substantial since 2010. Noma's fermentation lab (Copenhagen), David Chang and Ryan Sullivan-Phillips at Momofuku, Cortney Burns and Nick Balla (Bar Tartine), and Jeremy Umansky (Larder, Cleveland) have brought koji into Western culinary practice — using it on meat (accelerated dry-aging via protease activity), on vegetables, in desserts, and as a general umami amplifier. Umansky and Rich Shih's Koji Alchemy (Chelsea Green, 2020) is the definitive English-language treatment.
微生物分类
最佳条件
使用此菌种的发酵食品
Barley miso (mugi)
麦味噌Doenjang
된장Doubanjiang (Pixian)
郫县豆瓣酱Douchi (Chinese fermented black beans)
豆豉Gochujang
고추장Hatcho miso
八丁味噌Koji rice cultivation
米麹Makgeolli
막걸리Red miso (Sendai)
仙台味噌Black rice vinegar (Zhenjiang)
镇江香醋Sake (junmai)
純米酒Shoyu (soy sauce)
醤油Tamari
溜まり醤油White miso (Saikyo)
西京味噌使用此菌种的方法
- Use fresh, food-grade kōji-kin spore inoculum from a reputable supplier — never use wild ambient Aspergillus, which may include toxigenic A. flavus.
- Steam (don't boil) the substrate — boiling produces water-logged grain unsuitable for mycelium growth. 30-40 minute steaming, then cool to body temperature before inoculating.
- Maintain temperature and humidity carefully — 28-35°C and 75-85% RH. A simple koji incubation can be done in a cooler with a heating pad and water bath; commercial production uses dedicated muro rooms.
- Turn the substrate every 12 hours during incubation — redistributes moisture, prevents dense mat formation, keeps the mycelium oxygenated.
- Harvest at white-mycelium stage (36-48 hours typically) — before significant spore production. Visible spores (yellow-green) means over-aged koji.
常见错误
- Using wild ambient Aspergillus instead of purchased kōji-kin — risk of A. flavus contamination is real. Only food-grade certified strains.
- Letting the substrate get too wet — promotes bacterial competition over Aspergillus growth.
- Skipping the turning step — produces uneven mycelium and pockets of bacterial contamination.
- Over-incubating — past the white-mycelium stage, the koji develops bitter compounds and spores that affect flavor in downstream applications.
- Using A. oryzae in high-salt environments where A. sojae would be more appropriate — for shoyu's high-salt moromi, A. sojae is the correct choice.
交叉参考
相关指南
相关搭配
- Doenjang jjigae (Korean soybean-paste stew)
- Mapo tofu with Pixian doubanjiang
- Cantonese steamed fish with fermented black soybeans (douchi)
- Bibimbap with gochujang
- Miso soup with tofu and wakame
- Nasu dengaku (miso-glazed eggplant)
- Junmai sake with sashimi
- Samgyeopsal with ssamjang (Korean grilled pork belly)
- Shoyu with sushi rice and nigiri