so I was doing more looking into soy sauce (I love the stuff) and I am a little confused. I have organic shoyu from brand Ohsawa but it contain wheat.
Doing some google searches it looks like Tamari can contain only soy but shoyu has wheat.
"...tamari is naturally gluten free, but shoyu is not, since shoyu is traditionally fermented with wheat." http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-tamari-soy-sauce.htm
Currently I am using raw coconut aminos but its kind of sweet and I can't quite switch over since the taste is so different. For that reason I would love to figure out a raw soy sauce w/o wheat but I cant find raw tamari. Would it be better to be non-raw and without wheat, or raw with wheat?
Yes, as far as I know, Nama Shoyu is raw/unpasteurized, but contains wheat; tamari can be wheat-free but isn't raw. If I had to pick between the two, personally I would choose organic, wheat-free tamari - I'd be using it sparingly anyway. If you aren't sensitive at all to wheat (and prefer to be as raw as possible), choose shoyu and use sparingly. Perhaps alternate between the two.
I've been eating wild salmon sashimi plain lately (would still eat it with avocado and/or nori, for variety), but if I want a bit of saltiness, I use my leftover brine from homemade sauerkraut. Of course, it's not an exact substitute for soy sauce, but I enjoy it very much - not too salty, yummy interesting flavor, "living" and probioticky! It makes my tummy feel better. Another wonderful thing, I had made sauerkraut with purple/red cabbage and a little RealSalt (Redmond) so my "soy sauce substitute" was/is a gorgeous deep magenta/fuchsia. So pretty and delightful. It was yummy on seared ground buffalo patties (with raw butter) as well.
Now, a classic video, with subtitles, to brighten your day (or at least mildly disturb you):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wNW-Xl0xetc&feature=related(P.S. The original video without subtitles is slightly different and just as entertaining.)