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Home » Vegan Recipes

How to Make Umeboshi (Japanese Pickled Plums)|15–18% Salt

Published: Mar 12, 2026 by Vegin Vegan Vegun! · This post may contain affiliate links · Leave a Comment

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🇯🇵日本語で読む

A traditional homemade umeboshi recipe made with just three ingredients — ripe ume plums, coarse salt, and shochu or ume plum vinegar.

With 15–18% salt, no refrigerator is needed for either pickling or storage.

Made without red shiso, for a soft, natural color all their own.

Homemade umeboshi — Japanese pickled plums made with 15% salt, naturally pale pink without red shiso
Jump to:
  • 🌸 What is Umeboshi?
  • 🌿 What Makes This Recipe Special
  • 🍑 Ingredients & Tools
  • 📖 Instructions
  • 📌 Storage Tips
  • 🧂 About the Salt
  • 📘 Kitchen Notes|How to Get the Pickling Liquid Rising
  • 📚 Q&A
  • 🧺 More Ume Recipes
  • ✏️ Recipe Card
  • ☕️ Closing

🌸 What is Umeboshi?

Umeboshi are traditional Japanese pickled plums — small, intensely sour, and salty, with a flavor unlike anything else. Despite being called "plums" in English, the fruit (ume) is botanically closer to an apricot, with a firmer flesh and a sharper acidity.

To make umeboshi, the ripe ume fruit is packed in salt and left to pickle for several weeks, then dried in the sun for three days. The result is a wrinkled, concentrated little fruit that keeps for years — even decades — at room temperature.

In Japan, umeboshi are everyday food. A single one tucked into a bowl of rice or an onigiri (rice ball) is enough to make a meal. They also appear in ochazuke, salad dressings, and sauces, and have long been a staple of Japanese home remedies — thought to aid digestion and help prevent spoilage.

This recipe skips the red shiso, so the finished plums keep their natural color — soft pink to pale gold, rather than the deep red most people picture.

Umeboshi drying in soft autumn sunlight on a bamboo rack — a gentle alternative to midsummer drying

🌿 What Makes This Recipe Special

A traditional homemade umeboshi recipe made with just three ingredients: ripe ume plums, salt, and shochu. No red shiso, no shortcuts.

  • 15–18% salt — enough for stable, long-term storage
  • No refrigerator needed — pickling and storage are both at room temperature
  • Natural color — without red shiso, the finished plums are soft pink to pale gold
  • Naturally vegan — no honey, no fish sauce, nothing added
Fully ripe ume plums arranged on a bamboo colander, ready for pickling

🍑 Ingredients & Tools

▶ Ingredients

  • Ripe ume plums — Use fully ripe fruit only. Unripe or firm green ume won't release enough liquid, which increases the risk of mold. See 📘Kitchen Notes below for how to ripen ume at home.
  • Coarse salt — Choose a natural or sea salt with minerals, not refined table salt. Aim for 15–18% of the ume’s weight. More on salt in 🫙About the Salt below.
  • Shochu or vodka — Helps the pickling liquid rise quickly. In Japan, white liquor (ホワイトリカー) is the most common choice and works perfectly. If you've made umeboshi before and have leftover white ume plum vinegar, that works too.

Exact quantities are in the recipe card below👇

Three ingredients for homemade umeboshi — ripe ume plums, coarse salt, and white liquor

▶ Tools

A few things to keep in mind before you start:

  • Use acid-resistant containers — ceramic or glass are ideal. Avoid metal.
  • Any metal tools that come into contact with the plums should be washed immediately after use.

What you'll need:

  • Large bowl (for washing the ume)
  • Plate or colander (for drying)
  • Large container (for pickling)
  • Weight (a plate works fine)
  • Knife
  • Spatula

📖 Instructions

🕊Before you start: Wipe down all containers and tools with shochu or white liquor and let them dry completely. This is one of the most important steps for preventing mold.

Rinsing ripe ume plums in water — step one of making umeboshi at home
  1. Wash 
    • Gently wash the ripe ume in water to remove any surface dirt.
Ripe ume plums drying on a colander after washing — an important step before pickling
  1. Dry 
    • Transfer to a plate or colander and let dry completely.
    • Patting them dry with a kitchen towel speeds things up.
Trimming damaged spots from ripe ume plums and removing stem ends before pickling
  1. Trim
    • Cut away any damaged or discolored spots with a knife.
    • Remove the stem ends using a bamboo skewer or the tip of a knife.
Coating ripe ume plums with coarse salt and shochu to start the umeboshi pickling process
  1. Coat 
    • Place the ume in a large container.
    • Sprinkle the shochu or ume vinegar over them first, then add the salt.
Mixing ripe ume plums with salt using a spatula until the salt clings evenly to each plum
  1. Mix
    • Mix gently but thoroughly until the salt clings to the surface of each plum in a damp, even coat.
Placing a weight on salted ume plums to help the pickling liquid rise — key to making umeboshi at home
  1. Weight
    • Place a weight equal to 1–2 times the weight of the ume on top.
    • Store in a cool, dark place.
    • Turn the ume gently once a day until the pickling liquid fully rises.
🌿 The liquid usually rises within a day — and almost always within three.
Ume plums fully submerged in pickling liquid — the umeboshi are ready to wait out the summer
  1. Wait
    • Once the liquid has fully risen, reduce the weight by half.
    • Continue pickling until midsummer — ideally late July to early August, when heat and sunlight are at their peak.
    • If your ume are very soft, leave them longer until the skins feel slightly firmer — late August or September works well.
🌿 At least one month of pickling lets the salt work its way through the flesh and the skins to firm up. Patience here makes all the difference.
Umeboshi arranged in a single layer on a bamboo rack, ready for sun-drying
  1. Arrange
    • Pick a run of at least three clear, sunny days.
    • Arrange the ume in a single layer on a rack or net, making sure they don't touch each other.
🌿 Choose a spot with good airflow and direct sunlight.

🌿 Pour the remaining liquid — white ume plum vinegar — into a clean jar and set aside. It's too good to waste. See recipes using white ume plum vinegar.
Umeboshi left out overnight under the eaves to catch the night dew — for soft, supple skins
  1. Dry 
    • Bring the ume indoors on the first and second nights.
    • On the third night, leave them outside under the eaves to catch the night air — this gives the skins a softer, more supple finish.
🌿 Flip each plum once a day to dry all sides evenly. 

The best time is in the morning, just before bringing them outside — the skins are less likely to stick to the rack and tear.
Finished homemade umeboshi transferred to a ceramic jar for room-temperature storage
  1. Store 
    • On the morning of day four, transfer the finished umeboshi to a clean container and store at room temperature.
    • They're ready to eat right away, but a month of resting rounds out the saltiness nicely.
🌿 Ceramic or glass containers are best for storage.

Plump homemade umeboshi — Japanese pickled plums at 15–18% salt, stored in a ceramic jar

📌 Storage Tips

Finished umeboshi store well at room temperature at 15–18% salt — though conditions vary depending on your climate and storage environment.

  • Store in a ceramic or glass container. Metal lids or containers react with the acidity, so avoid them for long-term storage. If a metal lid does come into contact with the liquid, a layer of plastic wrap between the lid and the jar can help protect it.
  • White ume plum vinegar keeps well in a sealed glass jar at room temperature too. If the liquid reaches the lid, a layer of plastic wrap can help protect it.
📝 I once stored a batch wrapped in plastic wrap inside a storage bag — and the juices had leaked through before I knew it. Ceramic or glass really is the way to go.

🧂 About the Salt

▶ How much salt to use

This recipe uses 15–18% salt relative to the weight of the ume. More salt means better mold prevention and longer shelf life.

The right amount depends on your climate, storage environment, and the condition of your plums. If this is your first time making homemade umeboshi, starting at 18–20% is the safer choice. Once you're comfortable with the process, you can try reducing the salt — see low-sodium umeboshi for a 10% version.

If you have access to plenty of ume, making a few batches at different salt levels is a fun way to find your own perfect amount.

▶ Which salt to use

Use a coarse or natural sea salt, not refined table salt. Natural salts contain minerals — potassium, magnesium, calcium — that give the finished umeboshi a rounder, gentler flavor.

  • Refined salt (99%+ sodium) → sharp, one-dimensional saltiness
  • Coarse or natural salt (approx. 85–95% sodium) → mellower, with more depth

A sea salt or sun-dried salt with around 85–90% sodium content strikes a good balance.

📘 Kitchen Notes|How to Get the Pickling Liquid Rising

The most important thing in making umeboshi is getting the pickling liquid to rise quickly — because the faster it rises, the less chance mold has to take hold.

Three things make the difference:

❶ Start with fully ripe ume

Unripe or firm ume won't release enough liquid. Always use fully ripe ume.

If your ume aren't quite ready, ripen them at home:

  1. Spread them out in a single layer on a plate or colander, leaving space between each plum as much as possible.
  2. Leave in a cool, dark, well-ventilated spot for a few days.
  3. Turn them once a day if you can, so they don't sit in moisture.
Ripe ume plums ripening on a plate in a cool, ventilated spot before pickling

❷ Coat the ume thoroughly

Once the salt is added, mix gently but thoroughly until the salt clings to every plum in a damp, even coat. This is what draws the liquid out quickly and keeps mold away.

Ripe ume plums coated in coarse salt — a key step for drawing out the pickling liquid quickly

❸ Use the right amount of weight

1–2 times the weight of the ume is the guideline.

If the liquid is slow to rise, increase the weight. Try to distribute it as evenly as possible across the surface so the pressure reaches every plum.

🌿 Without a weight, the liquid tends to rise slowly — and in my experience, it can turn cloudy. If you want clean, clear white ume plum vinegar, a weight is worth using. See Q&A for more.
Pickled Ume with clear white plum vinegar

📚 Q&A

Q. Can I use bruised or damaged ume?


Yes. Cut away any damaged or discolored areas deeply — down to clean flesh — and they're fine to use.

The tradeoff: trimmed ume are more fragile during both pickling and drying, and the flesh breaks down more easily.

On the plus side, they tend to release liquid faster.
It's a bit of both — so it really comes down to how you're feeling that year, and how much time you have. If you do use damaged ume, keeping them in a separate batch makes things easier and safer.

Another option: use damaged ume for homemade ripe ume jam instead.

ripe ume jam

Q. Can I reduce the salt?

Lowering the salt increases the risk of mold and makes room-temperature storage unreliable.

For a 10% low-sodium version, pickling in the refrigerator is the safer approach.

Q. Can I make umeboshi without a weight?

It's possible. I tried it once — 18% salt, no weight, left at room temperature — shaking the container morning and evening to distribute the liquid.

It worked, but the liquid was slow to rise and I spent the whole time worrying about mold. If you're comfortable with that uncertainty, it's worth a try. The finished umeboshi turned out well.

Umeboshi made without a weight — possible, but requires extra attention during pickling

Q. What does "leave out for the night dew" mean?

It doesn't mean leaving the plums fully exposed outdoors overnight. It means placing them under the eaves or a covered area where they can take in the cool night air and morning moisture. This gives the skins a softer, more supple finish.

The plums will often soften naturally during storage on their own. It's optional — go with what suits your setup.

Q. A white powder appeared on the plums while drying. Is that okay?

Most likely, it's just salt crystals — a white, powdery coating that feels dry to the touch. It tends to appear on trimmed areas where salt is more concentrated. Nothing to worry about.

White salt crystals on trimmed umeboshi during drying — not mold, just salt

📝 What to watch for instead:
➤ Salt crystals — white and powdery, dry to the touch
➤ Mold — fluffy or fibrous in texture, sometimes gray, green, or black

If you spot anything fluffy or discolored, cut that section away deeply and check the surrounding plums carefully. If mold has spread widely, discard that plum. Wash any tools or hands that came into contact with it, and keep a close eye on the rest of the batch.

🧺 More Ume Recipes

▶︎ Other ume preserves

If this is your first year making umeboshi, these might be next:

  • ripe ume jam
    Golden Ripe Ume Jam|A Jar of Hope in Winter
  • Iced plum juice made with chai-spiced ume syrup
    Vegan Chai Plum Syrup (Japanese Ume Syrup with Spices)
  • bottled Korean plum extract (maesil-cheong)
    Korean Green Plum Syrup (Maesil-cheong)
  • Vegan Chai-Spiced Blueberry Plum Jam (Using Leftover Plums from Syrup)
    Vegan Chai-Spiced Blueberry Plum Jam (Using Leftover Plums from Syrup)
  • Maesil jangajji in a glass jar with homemade vegan kimbap using pickled plums
    Maesil Jangajji (Korean Pickled Green Plums) – Sweet, Spicy, and Crunchy!
  • Homemade umeboshi — Japanese pickled plums made with 15% salt, naturally pale pink without red shiso
    How to Make Umeboshi (Japanese Pickled Plums)|15–18% Salt
  • Homemade low-sodium umeboshi — additive-free Japanese pickled plums made with 10% salt
    How to Make Low-Sodium Umeboshi|10% Salt, Refrigerator Method
  • Homemade ume plum vinegar in a glass jar — clear and pale orange yellow
    How to Make Ume Plum Vinegar (Umezu / 梅酢)

▶︎ Recipes using umeboshi

A few vegan recipes built around that sour, salty punch — useful even when appetite is low:

  • Ume shiso cucumber sushi rolls neatly arranged on a cutting board, showing the pink ume paste and green shiso
    Ume Shiso Cucumber Roll (Kappa Maki) – Easy Vegan Sushi

▶︎ Recipes using white ume plum vinegar

The liquid left over from pickling — white ume plum vinegar — is one of the best byproducts of homemade umeboshi. Bright, salty, and deeply savory, it works in dressings, marinades, and more:

  • Vibrant deep red homemade low-sodium yukari furikake, perfect vegan Japanese seasoning.
    Red Shiso Furikake (Yukari-Style)|Homemade, Additive-Free & Vegan
  • Naturally Pink Beni Shoga, Ginger Pickled in Ume Vinegar in a jar
    Naturally Pink Beni Shoga|Ginger Pickled in Ume Vinegar

✏️ Recipe Card

Homemade umeboshi — Japanese pickled plums made with 15% salt, naturally pale pink without red shiso

How to Make Umeboshi (Japanese Pickled Plums)

by Vegin Vegan Vegun!
A traditional homemade umeboshi recipe made with just three ingredients — ripe ume plums, coarse salt, and shochu or ume vinegar.
At 15–18% salt, no refrigerator needed for pickling or storage.
Made without red shiso, for a soft, natural color.
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 1 day d
Pickling + drying 33 days d
Total 34 days d
Course preserves
Cuisine Japanese

Equipment

  • Large bowl  - for washing the ume
  • Plate or colander - for drying
  • Large container - for pickling
  • Weight - a plate works fine
  • Knife
  • Spatula

Ingredients
  

  • 500 g ripe ume plums
  • 90 g coarse salt (18% of ume weight (adjust to 15–18% to taste))
  • 2 tablespoon shochu (or vodka, or white ume plum vinegar— use 35% alcohol or higher if using shochu)

Instructions
 

Preparing the ume

  • Prep: Wipe down all containers and tools with shochu and let dry completely. This helps prevent mold.
  • Wash: Gently wash the ripe ume in water to remove any surface dirt.
    500 g ripe ume plums
  • Dry: Transfer to a plate or colander and let them dry completely. Patting them dry with a kitchen towel speeds things up.
  • Trim: Cut away any damaged or discolored spots with a knife. Remove the stem ends using a bamboo skewer or the tip of a knife.
  • Coat: Place the ume in a large container. Sprinkle the shochu or white ume plum vinegar over them first, then add the salt.
    90 g coarse salt
    2 tablespoon shochu
  • Mix: Using a spatula, mix gently but thoroughly until the salt clings to every plum in a damp, even coat.
  • Weight: Place a weight equal to 1–2 times the weight of the ume on top. Store in a cool, dark place. Turn the ume gently once a day until the pickling liquid fully rises.
  • The liquid usually rises within a day — and almost always within three.
  • Wait: Once the liquid has fully risen, reduce the weight by half. Continue pickling until midsummer — ideally late July to early August, when heat and sunlight are at their peak.
  • If your ume are very soft, leave them longer until the skins feel firmer — late August or September works well.
    At least one month of pickling lets the salt work its way through the flesh and the skins to firm up.

Drying the umeboshi

  • Arrange: Pick a run of at least three clear, sunny days. Arrange the ume in a single layer on a rack or net, making sure they don't touch.
  • Choose a spot with good airflow and direct sunlight.
    Pour the remaining liquid — white ume plum vinegar — into a clean jar and set aside.
  • Dry: Bring the ume indoors on the first and second nights.
    On the third night, leave them outside under the eaves to catch the night dew — this gives the skins a softer, more supple finish.
  • Flip each plum once a day to dry all sides evenly.
    The best time is in the morning, just before bringing them outside — the skins are less likely to stick to the rack and tear.
  • Store: On the morning of day four, transfer the finished umeboshi to a clean container and store at room temperature.
  • Ceramic or glass containers are best.
    They're ready to eat right away, but a month of resting rounds out the saltiness nicely.

Notes

▶ Always use fully ripe ume
Unripe or firm ume won't release enough liquid. Always use fully ripe fruit.
If your ume aren't quite ready, ripen them at home:
  1. Spread them out in a single layer on a plate or colander, leaving space between each plum as much as possible.
  2. Leave in a cool, dark, well-ventilated spot for a few days.
  3. Turn them once a day if you can, so they don't sit in moisture.
Keyword homemade umeboshi, how to make umeboshi, japanese pickled plums

☕️ Closing

By the time the umeboshi were done, the shiso had gone to seed. I made small batches of salt-pickled shiso seeds — both red and green — and around the same time, a furikake from fresh Korean perilla leaves.

Earlier in the summer, I'd also made a yukari-style red shiso furikake. It works just as well with green shiso.

Seasonal preserving takes time. But there's something quietly luxurious about working with your hands while the kitchen fills with fragrance — feeling the season through all your senses rather than just watching it pass.

I wonder what next year's kitchen will bring 🍃

Homemade red shiso furikake and green shiso furikake in jars — seasonal preserves made alongside umeboshi

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