You’ve seen it on cocktail menus, in salad dressings at Japanese restaurants, and recently on grocery store shelves next to soy sauce and ponzu. Yuzu is a small, aromatic Japanese citrus fruit with a combined flavor of lemon, grapefruit and tangerine. It’s popping up everywhere right now. Monin named yuzu his 2025 flavor of the year, and citrus has seen a 60% increase on U.S. drink menus over the past four years. However, most people have never tasted this fruit raw and don’t really know how to use it.
What is Yuzu?
Yuzu (pronounced “YOO-zoo”) is a small, aromatic citrus fruit native to East Asia, primarily used in Japanese and Korean cuisine for its zest and juice rather than eaten whole. Its flavor is often described as a combination of lemon, grapefruit and tangerine with a distinct floral note. It is one of the most cold-hardy citrus varieties, surviving temperatures as low as 10 degrees Fahrenheit. Fresh yuzu is rare and expensive outside of Japan. Most Western cooks work with bottled yuzu juice, yuzu kosho paste, or yuzu-infused products.
Key facts about Yuzu
Scientific name: Citrus junos (a hybrid of Ichang papeda and a wild sour mandarin) Origin: China, now grown mainly in Japan and Korea Size: About the size of a tangerine, with a bumpy, thick, oil-rich skin Flavor: Lemon, grapefruit and tangerine with floral and slightly herbaceous notes Used for: Zest and juice only. The flesh is too grainy and sour to eat on its own. Season: October to December in Japan; bottled juice is available all year round Cold hardiness: survives down to about 10°F, making it suitable for temperate gardens US imports: Fresh Japanese yuzu is restricted. Most fresh American yuzu comes from California or Korea. Where does Yuzu come from? Yuzu originated in China and spread to Japan and Korea over a thousand years ago. Botanists classify it as a natural hybrid of Ichang papeda, a wild citrus fruit native to central China, and a wild sour mandarin. The parent Ichang papeda gives yuzu its extraordinary resistance to cold. The sour mandarin parent provides aromatic complexity and lemony sweetness.
Today, Japan is the leader in world production. Farmers concentrate yuzu cultivation in Kochi Prefecture on the island of Shikoku, which provides a significant portion of Japan’s total production. Korea also widely cultivates yuzu, where people call it yuja. In both countries, yuzu has deep cultural significance beyond cuisine. In Japan, people traditionally bathe in water infused with whole yuzu fruits on the winter solstice, a centuries-old practice believed to ward off colds and bring good fortune.
Producers rarely export fresh yuzu. The United States limits imports of fresh Japanese citrus fruits to prevent the spread of citrus greening disease, confirmed USDA APHIS. As a result, California growers or Korean importers supply most of the fresh yuzu sold in the United States. During peak season in November and December, shoppers can find it at Japanese grocery stores like Mitsuwa, Nijiya, and H Mart, usually for $3 to $5 per fruit. Outside of this window, bottled juices and frozen peels are convenient alternatives.
What does Yuzu taste like? Yuzu is one of the most complex tasting citrus fruits available. Its flavor is tart and bright like lemon, but without the one-dimensional tang of lemon. Additionally, a grapefruit-like bitterness flows underneath, accompanied by a sweetness and mellowness more akin to tangerine. Underlying it all is a floral, almost jasmine-like note and a slight herbaceous quality that most citrus fruits completely lack.
This complexity has a chemical explanation. Food scientists have identified more than 60 volatile flavor compounds in yuzu, many more than in lemon or lime. The main component is limonene, the same compound that gives most citrus fruits their characteristic smell. Additionally, yuzu contains high levels of gamma-terpinene and unique terpenes from its parent Ichang papeda that create its characteristic green plant character. As a result, synthetic yuzu flavoring has historically struggled to replicate the full flavor profile, which is why chefs and bartenders who have worked with real yuzu keep coming back to it.
The juice is acidic enough that no one will drink it straight. However, adding a small amount to a salad dressing, sauce or cocktail creates layers of citrus flavor that lemon alone cannot replicate. The zest is intensely aromatic and contains most of the essential oil concentration. In Japanese cuisine, grating a small amount of yuzu zest onto a finished dish is a classic finishing technique, similar to the way Italian cuisine uses lemon zest on pasta or fish.
How is Yuzu used in cooking? Yuzu is almost never eaten as a whole fruit. The flesh is extremely grainy, each fruit produces very little juice, and the flavor is too intense and sour to eat plain. Instead, cooks use it as an aromatic seasoning ingredient. Specifically, they use the juice as a finishing acid or the zest as a fragrant garnish.
Ponzu Sauce is the most famous yuzu application. Ponzu is a Japanese condiment made from yuzu juice, soy sauce, mirin and kombu. Cooks use it as a dipping sauce for fondues, as a dressing for salads and sashimi, and as a marinade for grilled fish and meat. Store-bought ponzu uses yuzu juice as the main citrus component and is widely available. For a ponzu-style dressing at home, try it with carrot-ginger vinaigrette or drizzled rainbow spring rolls.
Yuzu kosho is another essential yuzu product. Producers make this fermented paste from yuzu zest, fresh chili peppers and salt. The fermentation process develops deep umami notes alongside the yuzu aroma. Green yuzu kosho uses unripe yuzu and green chili peppers, making it intensely aromatic and spicy. Yellow yuzu kosho uses ripe yuzu and red chili peppers, giving it a chewier and slightly sweeter character. A small amount added to a dish has a huge impact. It pairs well with grilled chicken, mixed with butter sauces or as a finishing element in dishes like Chinese Chicken Lettuce Wraps.
Cocktails and drinks represent the largest recent crossbreeding of yuzu in Western culture. Its flavor profile connects citrus and florals in a way that pairs exceptionally well with gin, vodka and sake. Yuzu margaritas, yuzu gimlets, yuzu highballs, and yuzu-soda spritzes have all appeared on craft cocktail menus in recent years. Bartenders often use bottled yuzu juice directly in shaken cocktails in the same way they use fresh citrus.
Yuzu in baking, desserts and salad dressings Desserts and pastries stir in the yuzu zest and juice the same way European baking uses lemon. Yuzu curd, yuzu cheesecake, yuzu mousse, and yuzu glazed pastries have become increasingly common in high-end bakeries and home baking. In particular, the floral note of yuzu pairs well with white chocolate, cream and coconut.
Dressings and marinades Benefit from yuzu juice as a finishing acid in place of lemon or rice vinegar. For example, a few tablespoons of yuzu juice in a sesame-based vinaigrette adds citrus brightness without the tang of pure lemon. It also works well as a marinade component for fish and light proteins like tofu. For inspiration, try incorporating it into a version of these teriyaki pork bowls.
Yuzu in skincare and fragrance Yuzu’s influence extends far beyond the kitchen. Manufacturers cold press its essential oil from its thick skin and use it as an important ingredient in the perfume and cosmetics industry. Yuzu oil is rich in limonene and vitamin C, giving it both a bright citrus scent and antioxidant properties favored by skincare formulators.
Major perfume houses and luxury skincare brands have incorporated yuzu as a top note in perfumes and as an active ingredient in serums, masks and body products. If you’ve encountered yuzu in skin care, its appeal lies in both its scent and its high vitamin C content. According to Health Line100 grams of yuzu provides 59 percent of the recommended daily intake of vitamin C. Additionally, according to Firmenich, a major perfume company, yuzu is one of the scents most strongly associated with happiness, along with ginger.
What can you replace Yuzu with? No substitute perfectly replicates the flavor of yuzu. However, for most culinary applications, the combination of a few ingredients comes close enough to be useful.
For the yuzu juice: Mix two parts fresh lemon juice with one part grapefruit juice and a few drops of tangerine or clementine juice. This combination comes close to the acidity of yuzu and layered citrus quality, although it lacks the floral note. For applications where the floral element is important, briefly dipping a small amount of lemon zest into the mixture adds some complexity.
For the yuzu zest: lemon zest is the closest single-ingredient substitute, although it lacks the floral, herbaceous dimension. A mixture of lemon zest and a small amount of lime zest comes close to the full profile.
For the yuzu kosho: no direct substitute exists. If a recipe calls for it, the closest approximation is a paste of fresh green chile, lemon zest and sea salt. This blend replicates the basic function of a spicy citrus condiment, although it lacks the depth of fermented umami.
See also
Why Yuzu is expensive Fresh yuzu sells at prices that may seem absurd for a fruit the size of a tangerine. Three factors determine the cost. First, yuzu grown from seed take 10 to 15 years to produce fruit. Grafted trees produce in 3 to 5 years, but the grafting process adds labor and cost at the seed stage inier. Second, yuzu are very thorny, making harvesting slow and tedious. Third, yields per tree are relatively modest compared to commercial citrus varieties. Add to that U.S. restrictions on importing fresh Japanese fruit, and supply constraints are significant. The market for California-grown yuzu is still developing, and domestic production is not yet large enough to drive prices down. For most home cooks, bottled 100% yuzu juice is both more convenient and economical than fresh juice.
Where to buy Yuzu Fresh yuzu hits stores during the November and December season at Japanese and Korean grocery stores including Mitsuwa, Nijiya, H Mart and select Whole Foods stores in major cities. Out of season, it is essentially unavailable fresh in the United States. JETROthe Japanese trade organization, provides information on yuzu as a traditional Japanese ingredient for those who want to learn more.
Year-round options are more convenient for most cooks. Brands like Yakami Orchard sell bottled 100% yuzu juice on Amazon and in most Asian grocery stores. It works as well as fresh in cooked applications and sauces. Most Japanese grocery stores carry yuzu kosho paste, and online retailers also carry it. Bakers can find dried yuzu peel and yuzu powder online. For cocktails, several specialty syrups and concentrates capture the flavor of yuzu in a format that dissolves easily.
Further reading Does Ponzu sauce go bad? Does soy sauce go bad? Does sesame oil go bad? Carrot and Ginger Dressing Rainbow spring rolls Chinese Chicken Lettuce Wraps Teriyaki Pork Bowls What is Yuzu? What does yuzu taste like? Yuzu tastes like a combination of lemon, grapefruit, and tangerine with a floral, slightly grassy quality that no other citrus fruit shares. It is tangy and aromatic, less tangy than straight lemon and more complex than grapefruit or tangerine alone. The zest is intensely fragrant. The juice is acidic enough that it is always used in small quantities as a flavoring agent rather than drunk straight. Food scientists have identified more than 60 aromatic volatile compounds in yuzu, which explains why the flavor is so complex and distinctive.
Is yuzu the same as lemon? No. Yuzu and lemon are distinct citrus fruits with different flavor profiles, origins and culinary applications. The lemon is tangy, clean and one-dimensionally tart. Yuzu is layered: tart like lemon, bitter like grapefruit, sweet like tangerine, and floral like lemon is not. They can be substituted in a pinch, but the results are noticeably different, particularly in applications where the floral and herbaceous notes of yuzu are the focus of the dish.
What is yuzu kosho? Yuzu kosho is a Japanese fermented condiment made from yuzu zest, fresh chili peppers and salt. It comes in two versions: the green, made with unripe yuzu and green peppers, intensely spicy and aromatic; and yellow, made from ripe yuzu and red peppers, softer and slightly sweeter. A small amount adds a touch of citrus tang and umami to grilled meats, fish, noodles, soups and sauces. It is sold in small jars in Japanese grocery stores and online and can be kept in the refrigerator for several months after opening.
Can you eat yuzu like an orange? Not really. Yuzu has very little edible flesh relative to its size, the flesh is full of large seeds and the juice is far too acidic and intense to be pleasantly consumed directly. The value of the fruit lies almost entirely in its aromatic zest and the small amount of juice it produces. Japanese cooks use the hollowed-out yuzu shell as a decorative serving vessel for small portions of food, especially in formal kaiseki cuisine, but the fruit itself is not eaten in the same way as an orange or tangerine.
Is yuzu good for you? Yes, in the context of its use. Yuzu juice and zest contain high concentrations of vitamin C, antioxidants, and beneficial flavonoids. According to Healthline, 100 grams of yuzu provides 59 percent of the recommended daily intake of vitamin C. The skin’s essential oil contains limonene and other compounds with antioxidant properties. Since yuzu is used in small amounts as a flavoring rather than consumed in large quantities, these nutritional benefits are modest in a typical serving. However, yuzu’s contribution to a well-seasoned dish, replacing salt or sugar as the primary flavor driver, is a real wellness benefit of a different kind.
What is the difference between yuzu and sudachi? Both are small finishing Japanese citrus fruits used for their juice and zest rather than eaten whole, but they are distinct. Sudachi is smaller, rounder and always used green and unripe. Its flavor is more pungent and intensely tangy than yuzu, with less floral complexity. Kabosu is the third Japanese citrus fruit in the same category, larger and more bitter than either. Of the three, yuzu has the most complex aroma and broadest culinary application. All three appear in ponzu sauce, but yuzu-based ponzu is considered the most popular. If a recipe calls for sudachi and you can’t find it, yuzu juice is the most reasonable substitute among the Japanese citrus options.
How do you pronounce Yuzu? Yuzu is pronounced “YOO-zoo” with equal stress on both syllables. In Japanese, the word is made up of two short syllables of approximately equal length. English pronunciation follows the same pattern. It’s not “YOO-zuh” or “yoo-ZOO”. If you’ve said it somehow in Japanese restaurants, don’t worry: the context makes it clear what you mean.
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