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Noto Oyster Festival
Oysters come up out of the winter sea. Anamizu sits on an inlet of Noto, a quiet, shelter…
Oysters come up out of the winter sea.
Anamizu sits on an inlet of Noto, a quiet, sheltered bay where the waves stay low and the water runs thick with plankton, and in that calm the oysters fatten slowly through the cold. It is the slowness that does it; the shellfish take their time, and the time goes into the meat.
In February the town holds its oyster festival. Grills are set over charcoal, the oysters laid on in their shells, and you wait for the steam to rise and the shell to crack open of its own accord, then tip the hot flesh straight into your mouth. The taste of the sea, concentrated. The colder the day, the sweeter the oyster—locals will tell you the best of them are eaten while snow is falling.
This is also a coast that was struck by earthquake. The bay was damaged, the rafts where the oysters are raised were thrown into disorder, and for a while it was not clear the harvest would return. But the sea came back, and the oysters grew again, and people grill them and eat them once more—not as a triumph, just as the ordinary business of a Noto winter.
Seven fishing harbors indent the coastline of the Noto Peninsula here, and the smell of the sea arrives before any signage does. Anamizu sits near the center of the peninsula, backed by low hills that cut the winter wind, with the Nanao North Bay to the south and Toyama Bay opening to the east. The town's name appears in records as far back as 808, and the commercial street that runs through its center — lined with restaurants and everyday shops — has the unhurried density of a place that has been trading for a very long time.
The sea defines what ends up on the table. Oysters are cultivated in the bay, and sea cucumber is processed into forms — *kuchiko*, *konowata* — that take patience to make and longer to acquire a taste for. Rock nori comes off the coast. Mebarú and black sea bream move through the waters. Noto wine is pressed locally, and Noto beef is raised on the surrounding land. The Maimon Festival and the Okiwa Tairyo Festival mark the rhythms of the fishing calendar, while the Hasebe Festival recalls the medieval lords who once held this ground from Anamizu Castle.
Above the town, the Myousenji five-storied pagoda at Hakuchizan stands as evidence of how early this place was settled — the temple dates to the Asuka period. On clear nights, the sky over Anamizu is dark enough to have drawn a national stargazing gathering to the town. The hills hold the cold at bay; the harbor keeps the town oriented toward the water.
Stay in Anamizu, Ishikawa
What converges here
- Meisen-ji Five-Story Pagoda
- Noto Hanto
- Kawachi Senjō Onsen
- Anamizu
- Noto-Kashima
- Noto Airport
- Maenami Fishing Port
- Iwaguruma Fishing Port
- Niizaki Fishing Port
- Sora Fishing Port
- Okinami Fishing Port
- Ko Fishing Port
- Kanami Fishing Port