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The Soy Sauce Format Your Customers Know Without Being Told
Fish-shaped soy sauce sachets are the most recognisable single-serve format in sushi takeaway. Each 3ml tare-bin holds a controlled portion of Kōmi dark soy sauce — twist off the cap, dispense, done. No mess in the delivery bag, no wasted sauce, no explanation required. This 500-sachet case is built for high-volume sushi operations, catering, and hotel food service where per-cover consistency matters as much as presentation.
Why Chefs Choose This
How to Use
The story behind the fish
The fish-shaped soy sauce container — called a tare-bin (タレビン) in Japanese, from tare meaning sauce and bin meaning vessel — has been part of bento and takeaway culture since the mid-twentieth century. The design is functional throughout: a squeezable body for measured dispensing, a narrow nozzle to limit over-pouring, and a sealed twist cap built for transport. These sachets are filled with Kōmi dark soy sauce brewed in Choshi, Chiba Prefecture, one of Japan's historic soy sauce-producing regions where producers have worked the same coastal climate and koji traditions for centuries. The Kōmi range brings that production tradition into a format designed specifically for professional kitchen and takeaway use.
What soy sauce do professional sushi restaurants use?
For takeaway and catering, the standard is a clean, rounded dark soy sauce with salt forward and no harsh edge — the profile that complements raw fish without overpowering delicate flavours. Kōmi's dark soy sauce fits that profile directly: the 3ml portion gives enough seasoning per piece without saturating the rice. For a product that handles thousands of covers per week without being noticed, the calibration is exactly what a professional operation needs. For a full breakdown of soy sauce styles and how Japanese kitchens use them, read the SushiSushi soy sauce guide.
Product Details
| Product Type | Fish-Shaped Soy Sauce Sachets (Tare-bin) |
| Brand | Kōmi |
| Origin | Choshi, Chiba Prefecture, Japan |
| Pack Quantity | 500 sachets |
| Sachet Volume | 3ml |
| Storage | Ambient, cool and dry |
In Japan they are called tare-bin (タレビン) — tare meaning sauce, bin meaning vessel. The fish shape is the most common design, though the format exists in other shapes. Tare-bin have been standard in bento packaging since the mid-twentieth century and remain the default soy sauce accompaniment for takeaway sushi across Japan and internationally.
One sachet per individual bento or takeaway box is the professional standard. For larger platters serving two to four people, two to three sachets is typical. A 500-unit case covers approximately 400 to 500 individual takeaway orders — roughly one to two weeks of service for a busy sushi bar, depending on volume.
For sushi, yes. Tear-open flat sachets leak easily in delivery bags and leave residue on packaging. The tare-bin format is sealed with a twist-off cap: the customer controls when and how much is dispensed, and the packaging stays clean en route. The fish shape also signals authenticity — it tells the customer this is a proper sushi operation rather than a generic delivery outlet. For non-sushi takeaway, standard flat sachets may be more practical.
Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 1 - Jul 6
US$40
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