Seasonal

Hamo season: the elegant pike conger that defines a Kyoto summer (and Gion Matsuri, July 2026)

Hamo season: the elegant pike conger that defines a Kyoto summer (and Gion Matsuri, July 2026)

© Zheng Zhou · CC BY-SA 4.0

One fish, one season

If unagi is Tokyo's midsummer fish, hamo (pike conger) is Kyoto's. In season from mid-May to mid-September, it is the elegant, faintly sweet white fish that appears on every serious Kyoto summer menu — in kaiseki, in tempura, simmered in a clear broth, or blanched and chilled. It is so tied to the season that locals call Gion Matsuri — the month-long festival running 1–31 July 2026, with its great float parades on 17 and 24 July — the 'Hamo Festival.'

Hamo no yubiki — blanched pike conger chilled and served with plum sauce, a Kyoto summer classic
Hamo no yubiki with plum sauce. Photo: Zheng Zhou, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Why it took a city to perfect it

Hamo is brutally bony. To make it edible, a chef performs honekiri — 'bone cutting' — slicing the flesh into a comb of fine cuts (roughly 24 cuts per sun, about 3cm) without severing the skin, so the tiny bones are broken but the fillet holds. It is one of Japanese cooking's signature skills; a Kyoto saying holds that a chef isn't fully trained until the knife obeys. Historically, hamo's hardiness is the whole point: it survived the hot journey from the seas off Awaji and Akashi to land-locked Kyoto, making it the rare fresh fish the old capital could eat in high summer.

How it reaches the table

The signature dish is hamo no yubiki (also hamo-otoshi): the cut fish is briefly blanched so the flesh blossoms into white petals, chilled, and served with tart plum sauce (umeboshi) or karashi-su miso — cool, clean and quietly luxurious. You will also meet hamo no otsukuri (as sashimi-style), grilled hamo lacquered with sweet sauce, and hamo-suri dumplings in a clear summer broth. The flavour is delicate; the pleasure is texture and the cool astringency of the plum against the heat.

What each diet should know

Hamo is fish, so it suits pescatarians but not vegetarians or vegans. The chilled yubiki with plum sauce can be naturally light, but check: ponzu and many sauces use wheat-based soy sauce (not gluten-free), and dressings may contain dashi or mirin. It is essentially never halal-certified. As always with kaiseki, state any need at booking, not on the night.

Where to eat it

Hamo is at its most authentic in Kyoto. Our directory's Tousuiro, a tofu-kaiseki house on the Kamogawa in Kiyamachi, is a refined seasonal Kyoto kitchen where summer menus feature it. In Tokyo, the season reaches the city's top kaiseki counters: Kagurazaka Ishikawa, the English-friendly Ise Sueyoshi, and Ginza Kojyu all build seasonal courses and can present hamo at its peak — ask when you reserve. Go in June or July for the freshest fish, and let the chef lead.

Places we’ve confirmed

Kiyamachi, Kyoto · Tofu kaiseki / yuba · ¥¥¥

Tousuiro Kiyamachi

Silky oboro tofu and yuba in a seasonal multi-course meal

An upscale riverside tofu-kaiseki house in central Kyoto serving silky oboro tofu and yuba in seasonal multi-course form, with a full English menu and summer riverside (kawayuka) seating. It offers a dedicated fish-free vegan course ('Rokuhara') with no meat, shellfish, egg, dairy or fish — but you must order that specific course, since the standard tofu courses likely use bonito dashi.

  • Pescatarian
  • Vegetarian
  • Vegan
  • Dairy-free
Last verified Jun 2026
  • Date
  • Anniversary
  • Business
  • Private room

Kagurazaka · Kaiseki (seasonal Japanese course) · ¥¥¥¥

Kagurazaka Ishikawa

Seasonal kaiseki course; signature truffle soba

A three-Michelin-star Kagurazaka kaiseki restaurant serving a seasonal omakase course. Kaiseki traditionally includes some meat/dashi, so a pescatarian (seafood, no-meat) menu must be requested in advance and confirmed directly. Not gluten-free.

  • Pescatarian
Last verified Jun 2026
  • Anniversary
  • Business
  • Private room

Nishi-Azabu · Muslim-friendly kaiseki (Japanese course) · ¥¥¥¥

Ise Sueyoshi

Seasonal Mie-Prefecture kaiseki course (halal version on request)

A counter-style kaiseki restaurant in Nishi-Azabu offering a dedicated multi-course menu made without pork, alcohol or mirin on advance request. Muslim-friendly / pork- and alcohol-free (not formally certified); book the halal course about a week ahead.

  • Halal
  • Vegetarian
  • Vegan
Last verified Jun 2026
  • Anniversary
  • Business
  • Private room

Ginza · Kaiseki · ¥¥¥¥

Ginza Kojyu

Seasonal omakase: grilled Ise lobster, ayu, eel, abalone

Chef Toru Okuda's two-Michelin-star counter, carved from a 270-year-old cypress, distills the season into impeccable Ginza kaiseki.

Last verified Jun 2026
  • Anniversary
  • Business

Sources

  1. Hamo (pike conger) and Kyoto traditions — SU4 Lab
  2. Grilled Hamo (Pike Conger Eel) — Our Regional Cuisines, MAFF (Japan)

FAQ

When is hamo (pike conger) in season in Japan?
Hamo is a summer fish, in season roughly from mid-May to mid-September, peaking around July. In Kyoto it is inseparable from Gion Matsuri, the festival that runs 1–31 July 2026 (float parades on 17 and 24 July) and is locally nicknamed the 'Hamo Festival.'
Why does hamo need a special knife technique?
Pike conger is full of fine bones, so a chef performs honekiri ('bone cutting') — making many fine cuts (about 24 per 3cm) through the flesh without cutting the skin, so the tiny bones are severed but the fillet stays intact. It is one of Japanese cuisine's signature skills, especially associated with Kyoto.
Misaki Honda
  • 12y food writing
  • Inbound dining specialist
  • Sommelier

Tokyo food editor covering inbound dining — 300+ meals a year, chosen by the moment and the menu.