Wagyu and Kobe Beef
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SO, WHAT IS WAGYU BEEF AND
WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN WAGYU AND KOBE BEEF?
Wagyu simply means Japanese cow
or cattle. It is a holistic term that is used to refer to any
meat from Japanese cattle and, despite common misconception,
wagyu is not a breed itself, nor does the term have any
relation to quality. So when we talk about ‘wagyu meat' or
‘wagyu steak,' it simply means it came from a Japanese cow.
Wagyu cattle are classified into four breeds – Japanese
Black, Japanese Brown, Japanese Poll,
and Japanese Shorthorn.
Tajima-gyu cows, from which Kobe beef comes from, belong
specifically to the Japanese Black breed. Only meat of
Tajima-gyu cows that fulfill strict lineage and quality
criteria can be termed ‘Kobe beef.' This means that all Kobe
beef is wagyu beef, but only a very small proportion of wagyu
beef is Kobe beef. In fact, only around 3,000 heads of
Tajima-gyu cattle are certified as Kobe beef each year. Kobe
beef contributes to just 0.06% of beef consumption in Japan,
and only a very small fraction of that is exported. You can
already begin to understand how rare real Kobe beef actually
is.
JAPAN’S KOBE BEEF: WHAT MAKES IT
SPECIAL
Cows that
drink beer, are massaged with rice wine and listen to classical
music? For meat lovers, Kobe beef is considered the epitome of
fine dining. But what is Kobe beef, where does Kobe beef come
from and why is it so expensive?
Kobe beef, comes from the
Tajima-gyu breed of cattle found in Japan's Hyōgo Prefecture, of
which Kobe is the capital and the meat's namesake. Introduced as
work animals in the rice cultivation industry during the 2nd
Century, Tajima-gyu became isolated from other breeds in the
small pockets of arable land within Japan's mountainous
landscape. Herd isolation and distinctive feeding techniques are
said to have led to unique differences in taste and texture.
Kobe beef is renowned for its superior flavor, tenderness and
high amount of intramuscular fat, giving the meat a marbled
appearance. It is often cited as being healthier than commercial
beef because of its high concentration of monounsaturated fats
and omega-3s. Its prized value must also be credited to the
mysterious rearing techniques said to aid the meat's delectable
flavor and texture. There are three major stories that crop up
time and time again and have achieved somewhat of urban legend
status. The
first is that the cows are given beer to induce appetite. The
second is that they are massaged daily, sometimes with sake
(Japanese rice wine), as a proxy for exercise in the tight
living quarters and to further accentuate the marbling that Kobe
beef is so well known for. And the third is that classical music
is played to them as a relaxation technique and at feeding time,
so they associate the music with eating and hence the music
improves their appetite. While there is no hard evidence to
suggest that any of these techniques improve flavor or texture,
they certainly give the imagery of the cows living as kings,
adding to the decadence of a Kobe beef meal.
WAGYU VS KOBE
Wagyu beef grades and Kobe beef
grades
As Kobe beef is a type of wagyu beef, Kobe beef is graded using
the wagyu grade system. This system uses a combination of
letters and numbers and is used to rate the quality of Japanese
beef. Wagyu is given a letter grade (A through C) for yield and
a number grade (1 through 5) for quality.
YIELD GRADE
Yield grade determines the ‘cut
ability' of the meat, meaning the proportion of meat that can be
obtained from a certain part of the cow's carcass.
Grade A : Above standard
Grade B : Standard
Grade C : Below standard
QUALITY GRADE
Wagyu beef quality is determined
by evaluating four different categories: the thin strips or
flecks of fat known as marbling; the color and brightness of the
beef; firmness and texture; and the color, luster and quality of
the fat. The beef is assigned a number grade from 1-5 for each
of the categories.
5: Excellent
4: Good
3: Average
2: Below average
1: Poor
GRADE BMS NUMBER
Within the marbling category,
there is additional grading based on the Beef Marble Score
(BMS). The BMS allows the distinct marbling of the beef to be
graded to an even finer degree of accuracy, and is given a
number grade of 1-12. This shows just how important marbling,
known as ‘sashi‘ in Japanese, is to the quality of wagyu and the
overall melt-in-your mouth experience of high quality Japanese
beef.
5: Excellent 8 – 12
4: Good 5 – 7
3: Average 3 – 4
2: Below average 2
1: Poor 1
The best score that can be obtained is A5, and within that
A5-12, the latter being extremely rare. According to author of
‘Real Food, Fake Food' and food journalist Larry Olmstead, “USDA
Prime, our highest marbling grade, equates to about 4 (on the
BMS scale). Most domestic Wagyu or hybrids would score 6-9,
while Kobe usually ranks 10 or higher.”
Quality scores are taken extremely seriously and are done by no
less than three independent highly-trained assessors, whose
scores are combined to establish a final score. Japanese beef
must grade at the same level across all quality criteria to be
given that status. For example, beef that is assessed as A for
yield and 5 across three of the four quality measurements, and 4
for one, can only be given a score of A4. For wagyu beef to be
classified as Kobe beef, it must have a yield and quality score
of A4 or A5. But that's not all. What are the requirements for
real Kobe beef? To be classified as authentic Kobe beef, there
are various boxes that must be checked.
KOBE BEEF COWS
Remember that Kobe beef must come
from a Tajima-gyu cow, belonging to the Japanese Black breed.
Not only that, but it must be of pure-breed Tajima-gyu lineage,
be a steer (castrated bull) or virgin cow, and have been born
and raised in Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. During its life, it must
have been fed only grains and grasses from within the
Prefecture, and upon its death, be processed in approved
slaughterhouses in Hyōgo, and have a gross carcass weight of
470kg or less.
KOBE BEEF QUALITY
Remember the yield and quality
scores for wagyu we talked about above? Kobe beef must achieve
the highest grades of A4 or A5. In addition, the Beef Marbling
Score (BMS), must be 6 or above.
Grade BMS No.
5: Excellent 8 – 12
4: Good 5 – 7
This means that A4 wagyu with a BMS of 5 does not meet the
criteria to be called Kobe beef.
KOBE BEEF AUTHENTICITY
Kobe beef must be assigned a 10-digit ID
number, so that its authenticity can be traced back to the
individual cow it came from. Only when all of these
requirements are satisfied, can a piece of wagyu be called Kobe
beef or Kobe steak. If you've ever asked yourself, why is Kobe
beef so expensive? Then this is it.
KOBE BEEF PRICE AND WAGYU BEEF
PRICE.
Kobe beef is rare and expensive,
even in Japan. Kobe beef price per pound in Japan (about 450
grams) is about $300, but you can pay around $500 for the best
cuts of meat at finer establishments. Given its scarcity and
price tag, most Japanese have never tasted it, and those who
have generally reserve it for a very special occasion. In the
US, you can expect to pay $50 per ounce (less than 30 grams).
While wagyu can be half that.
BUYER BEWARE - THE BIG KOBE BEEF AND WAGYU SCAM
With its
reputation for excellence and consumers ready to open their
wallets for a taste of it, it's unsurprising that restaurants
the world over have tried to cash in on the Kobe beef name.
While there are strict laws in place on the usage of the term
‘Kobe beef' in Japan, such standards are largely unrecognized
abroad, meaning that restaurateurs outside Japan are not bound
by the same stringent guidelines, leaving them to get creative
with their menu descriptions. You've no doubt encountered menu
items such as American Kobe beef, Kobe burgers and Kobe beef
sliders.
The reality is almost all
beef marketed as Kobe beef outside of Japan is not actually real
Kobe beef. American Kobe beef is an oxymoron. Kobe beef must
come from Tajima-gyu
cattle that were born, raised and slaughtered in Hyogo
Prefecture and have only been fed from grains and grasses from
within the Prefecture, and hence any beef produced in the United
States, whether from Tajima-gyu cattle or not, cannot be Kobe.
Plain and simple.
The usage of terms such as ‘American
style Kobe beef' or ‘American Kobe style beef' seems to be a
clever semantic variance being employed by a number of
restaurants who want to leverage Kobe beef's reputation,
while trying to mitigate any potential consumer-related
backlash. That said, there have already been several
class action suits filed against restaurants in America who
were allegedly selling fraudulent Kobe beef, and affected
consumers are demanding their money back. According to
Attorney Kevin Shenkman, who served as class counsel for suits
against a number of these restaurants and dining groups,
explains: “These businesses are passing off their beef as
being Kobe beef when it is anything but Kobe beef
and they’re charging premium prices to consumers who are
paying those prices because they think that it is in
fact Kobe beef and it’s not. ”Yet despite growing media
attention, it seems to have made little difference to consumer
awareness or spending in the US, where menu items like Kobe
sliders have already taken a foothold in the new age of
foodie-ism. The term Kobe, and even wagyu, is used so
liberally on menus in America that customers have almost come
to expect these ‘premium' options from just about any
neighborhood bistro, without considering glaring facts.
WAGYU BEEF AND KOBE BEEF IN THE US
From 2010 to August
2012, the import of any Japanese wagyu beef from Japan, Kobe
or otherwise, to the United States was banned due to concerns
over foot and mouth disease believed to have originated from
livestock in Japan.
Even prior to that, only boneless,
fresh Japanese beef could be imported and none of it was Kobe,
as slaughterhouses in Hyōgo Prefecture (from which only
authentic Kobe beef can come from) were not approved for export
by the USDA. Therefore any restaurant claiming to be serving
Kobe beef in any form in the United States before August 2012
was being a bit creative with their menus. While the USDA's ban
on Japanese beef importation was lifted on August 27th. 2012,
only very small quantities of Kobe beef are distributed to
select buyers. Most Kobe beef remains in Japan for domestic
consumption. Even the term ‘wagyu' is very loosely applied in
the United States. While pure-bred Japanese cattle do exist in
the US, meat need only be 46.9% Japanese to be labeled wagyu.
Often wagyu in the United States is cross-bred with Angus cattle
and may be more Angus beef than wagyu. However, even this very
broad definition of wagyu only applies to farmers and abattoirs;
it does not extend to restaurants. So essentially restaurants
can sell any beef as wagyu or Kobe beef, and many do.
WHERE TO GET REAL KOBE BEEF
Fortunately, there is a lot you can
do to protect yourself as a consumer and to avoid being duped
into paying for something that is not the real deal.
Below are a couple of common sense rules you can use.
Check the price tag and skip the Kobe beef burgers
As journalist Larry Olmstead who has
done significant research into Kobe beef fraud says, “High
prices don’t guarantee that you are getting Kobe beef but low
prices virtually guarantee that you’re not. ”Price is a good
first indicator. As much as we'd all like to think we can get
a premium Kobe steak or burger for an extra $10 at the local
gastro pub, unless you're paying a couple of hundred bucks for
it, it's not Kobe beef. And no one in their right mind is
going to grind up top-quality wagyu, much less prized Kobe
beef, into a hamburger patty in the first place. There is
essentially no such thing as ground Kobe beef. The late
great Anthony Bourdain described Kobe sliders as the
worst dish in America. “What makes Kobe good is texture. You
lose all of that immediately (in a Kobe slider).“There’s no
way that you could appreciate the things that make Kobe
interesting and good and expensive in a little burger or a
meatball drowned in sauce. I mean it’s silly.”But even when
the dish appears to be prepared in a logical manner and the
price seems right, this doesn't guarantee that you're being
served what you ordered. For that we need to dig a little
deeper.
Ask your server
Any restaurant serving real Kobe beef
should be able to tell you exactly where it came from, its
precise grade, their distributor, and be able to produce the
10-digit authentication number. Kobe beef is not easy to
procure. If they don't know or hesitate, this is a sure sign
that it is not authentic Kobe beef.
Check if the restaurant, Retailer or Wholesaler has actually
imported Kobe beef.
Kobe beef is highly coveted and
regulated in Japan; they don't just send it anywhere without
knowing exactly who it is going to and where it will end up.
Fortunately for consumers, this information is available
freely online. In the United States, as of August, 2017, there
were only 9 restaurants that have access to genuine Kobe beef.
You can find a list of overseas accredited restaurants and
distributors here.
http://www.kobe-niku.jp/en/contents/certification/index.html
You can also search by the 10-digit authentication
number to check that it is a legitimate number. In
addition, you can check when the beef was exported and
the company it was imported by here. If the information you
are given by an establishment cannot be confirmed here,
something is amiss.
THE MOST EXPENSIVE BEEF IN THE WORLD
Given its price and reputation,
you might think that Kobe beef is the most expensive beef in the
world. But, in fact, it's not even the most expensive or most
prized wagyu. That accolade goes to Matsusaka beef, which
domestically in Japan is generally considered to be the best
Japanese beef due to its higher on average fat content, a key
indicator of quality wagyu. While Kobe beef must have a BMS of
6+, Matsusaka must be 10-12. The most expensive beef in the
world though is reportedly from a farm in Northeastern France
where a butcher who runs his own abattoir creates aged steaks
from his Blonde Aquitaine stock through a process of
hibernation. Through the process, in which cold air is blown at
75 km per hour onto the meat in a -45 degree Fahrenheit
environment, the beef may be kept for an indeterminate amount of
time without loss of quality. A 2000 vintage cote de boeuf (rib
steak) costs around $3,200.
CONCLUSION
This information may sound
confusing, but at the end of the day, it's quite simple. Do your
research and avoid cheap (and expensive) imitations. Go directly
to the source and select an accredited Kobe beef restaurant,
retailer or wholesaler in your country from the list or save
your pennies for a trip to Japan for the guaranteed real deal.
And the beer, massages and music, you ask? While I hate to put a
dampener on a good story, it basically has to be put down to
myth. It's certainly plausible that some farmers have used such
techniques (and perhaps that is where such legends derived), but
it's definitely not an industry-wide standard. In the words of
Yoshinori Nakanishi, a Kobe cattle farmer who’s been in the
business for nearly 40 years, “Neither I nor any beef farmer I
know would ever dream of giving cows beer.”Guess they'll just
have to let the taste speak for itself. Luckily for them, one
bite of the famed “melt-in-your-mouth” fare usually requires
little convincing.