Weighted sea cucumber can contain excess salt, sugar, ash or retained water, so gross weight is not the same as genuine dry product. Screening should remain non-destructive: inspect colour, papillae, surface deposits, hardness, body cavity and odour; record dry net weight and declared head count; then investigate suspicious loading. Tasting an unknown appraisal sample is neither necessary nor appropriate.
Four loading methods leave different clues
Repeated heavy salting may leave conspicuous white crystals outside or inside the body cavity. Sugar treatment can create an unnaturally glossy black surface that becomes tacky in warmth and readily attracts moisture. Thick ash or mineral coating dulls natural detail and may obscure papillae. Insufficient drying adds less visible water weight while increasing storage instability.
None of these clues should be judged alone. A legitimate mature dried cucumber can carry some natural salt bloom, and species differ widely in colour and texture. The question is whether deposits, handling and internal structure form a coherent processing picture, not whether the item matches one idealised photograph.
What a dry-bench examination records
Natural brown-black variation is compared with lacquer-like shine or chalky uniformity. The assessor studies whether papillae remain distinct, whether the body is hard rather than rubbery, and whether the abdominal opening and internal tendons are visible. Loose crystals, grit or unidentified filling are kept apart from authentic tissue.
Odour also provides context. A mild dry marine scent can be consistent with sound stock, while sourness, strong chemicals or a fermented smell raise concern. The sample is not licked to test salt or sugar. If composition matters, appropriate analytical testing is more defensible than exposing a person to an unknown product.
Species and specification still need confirmation
- Photograph the back, belly, both ends, papillae and open cavity.
- State the exact unit behind any pieces-per-catty head count.
- Weigh representative items on a calibrated scale before sorting deposits.
- Do not soak the lot, because rehydration destroys dry-weight evidence.
- Retain origin labels and processing descriptions with the relevant batch.
Japanese Apostichopus groups, including Kanto and northern products, are often compared by body-wall density and papillae arrangement. A claimed row count can support identification, but processing can bend or remove projections. Liaoning and other legitimate sources have different patterns, so “more spines” is not a universal authenticity rule.
Kam Hoi Shing's appraisal separates probable species, real dry matter, added material and damage before considering current demand. Owners should not scrub crystals or fan-dry a disputed lot to improve presentation; those actions alter the evidence. A transparent conclusion explains any moisture deduction or rejection from observed findings rather than from an unexplained percentage.