COLTURA

Aspergillus sojae

Nome scientifico: Aspergillus sojae

Il koji della salsa di soia — strettamente imparentato con A. oryzae ma adattato ad ambienti ad alta salinità; l'organismo specifico dietro shoyu, tamari e ferment correlati

Membri 3
Tipo Specie singola
Importanza Consolidato
Avviso di traduzione

Il testo principale di questa pagina è disponibile solo in inglese nella v1. L'interfaccia e i metadati sono tradotti in italiano. La traduzione editoriale è prevista per la v2.

Informazioni su questa coltura

Aspergillus sojae is Aspergillus oryzae's closely related cousin, specifically adapted for the high-salt environment of Japanese soy sauce (shoyu) fermentation. The two species share most genetic features and produce similar enzyme profiles, but A. sojae tolerates higher salt concentrations and somewhat different pH ranges — characteristics that matter for shoyu's 16-18% NaCl moromi where standard A. oryzae would slow or stop.

Genetic analysis confirms A. sojae and A. oryzae are distinct but very close species, both descended from the wild A. flavus group through parallel domestication. Some authors treat them as separate species; others as variants of a single species (A. oryzae sensu lato). The food-industry distinction is functional and well-established: A. sojae spores are sold specifically for shoyu production by suppliers (Higuchi Matsunosuke Shoten and others), and shoyu producers typically use either A. sojae alone or A. sojae co-inoculated with A. oryzae to balance flavor development.

The shoyu fermentation process exploits A. sojae's salt tolerance in a multi-stage way. First, the koji is grown on a mixture of cooked soybeans and roasted-cracked wheat in low-salt aerobic conditions for 36-48 hours — both A. sojae and A. oryzae perform well here. The completed koji is then mixed with 18-20% brine to form the moromi mash, which ferments anaerobically for 6 months to 3 years. In the moromi, A. sojae's enzymes continue working at the high-salt levels that would inactivate most other molds. The proteases break down soy and wheat protein into peptides and free amino acids (the glutamate that defines shoyu's umami); the amylases convert wheat starch to sugars (consumed by Tetragenococcus halophilus and later by Zygosaccharomyces rouxii).

After the months-long moromi fermentation, the mash is pressed and the resulting liquid is pasteurized and bottled as shoyu. The role of A. sojae is to have set up the substrate during the koji stage and continued enzymatic breakdown throughout the aging — its enzyme activity, more than its cellular activity, persists through the months of moromi development.

For home fermenters: A. sojae is harder to source than A. oryzae. The Japanese suppliers (Higuchi Matsunosuke Shoten, Akita Konno) sell specific A. sojae strains; specialty fermentation suppliers in the US (Cold Mountain, GEM Cultures) sometimes carry it. For home miso production A. oryzae is fine; for home shoyu production A. sojae is preferred but A. oryzae will work imperfectly at lower salt levels.

Classificazione microbica

Domain Eukarya Kingdom Fungi Phylum Ascomycota Class Eurotiomycetes Order Eurotiales Family Aspergillaceae Genus Aspergillus Species A. sojae. Sister species: A. oryzae (closely related, sometimes considered the same species in different lineages), A. flavus (toxigenic wild ancestor).

Caratteristiche metaboliche chiave

Similar to A. oryzae but adapted for higher-salt environments. Strong protease activity at high salt (functions in 16-18% NaCl moromi). Amylase activity continues at moromi salt levels. Aerobic during koji growth phase; provides residual enzyme activity during anaerobic moromi stage.

Condizioni ottimali

Temperature: 28-35°C optimal during koji stage. Humidity: 75-85% during koji cultivation. Salt tolerance: 18%+ NaCl in moromi stage (higher than A. oryzae). pH: 4.0-7.0 optimal. Oxygen: aerobic during koji; enzymes continue working in anaerobic moromi.

Fermenti che usano questa coltura

Lavorare con questa coltura

  1. Use A. sojae specifically for shoyu and tamari production — A. oryzae works at lower salt but underperforms in 16-18% NaCl moromi.
  2. Roast and crack wheat before mixing with soybeans for the koji substrate — provides starch surfaces for the koji-mold attachment and contributes aromatic compounds.
  3. Aim for 50:50 soybean:wheat ratio for traditional koikuchi shoyu — adjust for usukuchi (lighter) or tamari (less or no wheat).
  4. Allow 6-12 months minimum moromi aging — A. sojae's enzymes work slowly at high salt; shoyu develops over time.
  5. Stir the moromi every 2-4 weeks for the first 3-4 months — provides oxygen for yeast phase and prevents stagnation.

Errori comuni

  1. Using A. oryzae for shoyu instead of A. sojae — works but slower and produces a different flavor profile.
  2. Skipping the wheat substrate — wheat is essential for traditional shoyu flavor; wheat-free produces tamari (a different product).
  3. Insufficient salt in moromi (<15%) — invites bacterial spoilage during long aging. 16-18% is the safe range.
  4. Sealing moromi vessels — needs some air exchange for the yeast phase succession.
  5. Aging in inappropriate vessels — cedar (sugi) is traditional and the wood contributes flavor; food-grade plastic works but is flatter.

Riferimenti incrociati