Yamada Mokutan Kishu Binchotan

Yamada Mokutan Kishu Binchotan

Regular price $45.00 $0.00
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Product Type: Kishu Binchotan

What is Binchotan(備長炭)?
Binchotan means charcoal in Japanese. However, this Binchotan, or sometimes referred to as bincho zumi, is a particular type of charcoal that is a long-burning, clean, and natural alternative to charcoal briquettes.

While pretty much more expensive compared to your ordinary charcoals in the market, this flameless charcoal produces intensive heat, burns cleanly, giving off no odor, and cooks at a lower temperature than other types of charcoal, making the outside of material crispy without drying it out. This log- shaped charcoal is made from various oak that combines the best aspects of lump charcoal and briquettes. The smoke it produces gives a distinct enticing flavor. The heat of Binchotan is so intense that it could actually create a hole in a pan like an infrared ray hitting the center.

This charcoal is dried and stacked into brick ovens and taken to four different temperatures, two hundred degrees, four hundred degrees, five hundred fifty degrees, and nine hundred degrees Celsius, for 8 weeks. For the last stage, they rapidly add air so that the heat reaches one thousand two hundred degrees Celsius, which carbonizes it and permanently changes the charcoal's internal structure.

What is the difference with Kishu-Binchotan(紀州備長炭)?

Kishu Binchotan is a charcoal that is a regional collective trademark of the Wakayama Prefecture Charcoal Cooperative. Only white charcoal made in the prefecture from oak natural wood, mainly Ubamegashi, can be sold as Kishu Bincho charcoal. The charcol which is only made of Ubamegashi wood can be called Ubame. Ubamegashi is a type of oak wood, it's almost same with oak wood charcol but Kishu-binchotan was mainly made of Ubamegashi before. So people has a image of Kishu-binchotan = Ubamegashi wood and for the reason its one of the popular style

The higher the quality of Kishu Bincho charcoal, the harder it is, and the tighter the charcoal, the harder it is to ignite, but on the other hand, once it ignites, it will continue to burn stably for a long time. It is hard to burn and has a high amount of infrared rays, so the surface is baked evenly and quickly. It is highly evaluated in many Japanese charcoal-grilled dishes, and has been popular as a charcoal favorite by cooks for a long time.

Due to international shipping regulations, we cannot send binchotan to customers outside of Canada. We apologize for the inconvenience.


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