SUSHI SUNSET
Imagine America running out of beef, France running out of snails, or Mexico running out of tortillas-- well here in the Orient there's a cuisinal change under way that's perhaps even more disturbing: Japan is running out of
maguro (bluefin tuna). Not only because of competition and overfishing, but also because
sushi and sashimi are now world foods and the premium ingredients command big bucks.
When I first came to Japan, the early morning
Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo was wall-to-wall fresh-frozen tuna carcasses. You could get fresh
magurozushi in any streetcorner
sushiya without shelling out too many yen. Then a few years ago, when I heard that a single bluefin tuna had sold for something like 260,000 dollars, I thought: that's the end of
sushi as I know it. The situation hasn't gotten any better since then.
And isn't it always the way— just after Japan formed the
Sushi Police to ensure round-the-world conformity with the homeland's founding standards, here in the Land Where
Sushi Began the
sushi chefs are scrambling for - shudder -
maguro substitutes, and are turning to ingredients they once mocked, like avocado, deer and even... horse.
Yes,
raw horsemeat sushi is galloping your way; can GM
sushi be far behind?
BTW,
don't eat cheap sushi...
Excellent
recent history of sushi...
Plus
a neat link from Michael...