The Japanese horse mackerel (Trachurus japonicus) is a species named after mackerel in the family Carangidae. Their maximum reported length is 50Â cm (20Â in) with a common length of 35Â cm (14Â in). They have a maximum reported weight of 0.66Â kg (1.5Â lb) and a maximum reported age of 12 years. They are found around the coast of Japan, apart from Okinawa Island, usually on sandy bottoms of 50â"275Â m (164â"902Â ft) deep. They feed mainly on small crustaceans such as copepods, and shrimps and small fish. They are similar to the yellowtail horse mackerel around New Zealand and Australia, apart from having more gill rakers and larger eyes.
The Japanese name for the horse mackerel is aji (ãã), and by default generally implies the species Trachurus japonicus (which can be more specifically referred to as ma-aji (ã¾ãã), literally "true aji"). The name is most commonly written in hiragana; although a kanji (鯵) does exist, it is not in common use. It is commonly deep fried ("aji furai" ãããã©ã¤) or salt-grilled ("shioyaki aji" å¡©ç¼ããã).
In Korean cuisine, the fish is dubbed jeon-gaeng-i (ì ê°±ì´) and is the default horse mackerel designated by this name. It is commonly grilled or fried as a jeon-gaeng-i gui (ì ê°±ì´ êµ¬ì´). Among the specialties of Jeju cuisine is the soup gagjaegi-gug (ê°ì¬ê¸°êµ), the name of which is derived from the name for the fish in the Jeju language.
Fisheries
The Japanese horse mackerel is important as a commercial fish in Japan, where it is caught using trawls, purse seines, traps and longlines.