Wakayama Mikan & Umeboshi — Citrus Orchards & Pickled Plums
Wakayama Prefecture is Japan's largest producer of mikan oranges (温州みかん, unshu mikan) and umeboshi pickled plums (梅干し), two agricultural products deeply embedded in Japanese food culture. Mikan orchards blanket the hillsides overlooking the Pacific Ocean, where warm climate and sea breezes create ideal growing conditions. The mikan harvest runs October-March, with peak sweetness in December-January. Wakayama mikan are prized for their balance of sweetness and acidity, thin skin, and seedless flesh — eaten fresh, they're a winter staple in Japanese homes (kotatsu tables traditionally have a basket of mikan nearby).
Umeboshi are sour-salty pickled plums made from ume fruit (梅, Japanese apricot) harvested in June, salt-cured, sun-dried, and aged for months to years. Wakayama's Minabe-Tanabe region produces 60% of Japan's umeboshi, with the Nanko-ume variety considered the finest — large, thick-fleshed, and intensely flavored. Umeboshi are eaten with rice, used in onigiri filling, and valued for purported health benefits (digestive aid, antibacterial). The production process is artisanal — ume are hand-picked, salt-layered in barrels, pressed to extract liquid (ume vinegar), then sun-dried on bamboo mats during the summer heat (doyō-boshi, 土用干し). Farms offer seasonal experiences: ume harvesting (June), mikan picking (November-February), and factory tours showing the pickling process.
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