Jump to content

Koshihikari

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 85.27.42.125 (talk) at 12:28, 3 February 2011 (link to french). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Koshihikari.

Koshihikari (コシヒカリ, 越光) is a popular variety of rice cultivated in Japan as well as Australia and the United States.

Koshihikari was first created in 1956, by combining 2 different strains of Nourin No.1 and Nourin No.22 at the Fukui Prefectural Agricultural Research Facility. It has become very popular now in Japan, in part due to its good appearance. It is one of the most highly-grown varieties of rice in the country, and its taste is said to differ per region. Some people think very highly of the Koshihikari harvested in Uonuma area of Niigata Prefecture which is typically the most expensive rice in all of Japan. The character for koshi (越) is used to represent old Koshi Province, which stretched from present-day Fukui to Yamagata. Koshihikari can be translated as "the light of Koshi ".

Other rice varieties close to its strains, such as Akitakomachi, Hitomebore, and Hinohikari have been created afterwards by cross-breeding Koshihikari with other Japanese varieties of rice.

Features

  • Highly susceptible to blast disease
  • Its stem collapses easily when mature