Google – AFP, 5 January 2013
![]() |
Kiyoshi
Kimura snapped up the 222-kilo (488-pound) bluefin tuna on
January 5, 2013 for
a record $1.8 million (AFP, Yoshikazu Tsuno)
|
TOKYO — A
monster bluefin tuna sold for a record-breaking $1.8 million in the year's
first auction at Japan's Tsukiji fish market, nearly three times the previous
high set last year.
The
222-kilogram (488-pound) fish, caught off Japan's northern city of Oma, fetched
a winning bid of 155.4 million yen (about $1.8 million), said an official at
the Tokyo fish market.
The figure
dwarfs the previous high of 56.49 million yen paid at last year's inaugural
auction at Tsukiji, a huge working market that features on many Tokyo tourist
itineraries.
Saturday's
winning bidder was Kiyoshi Kimura, president of the company that runs the
popular Sushi-Zanmai chain, who also won the auction for last year's
record-breaking bluefin.
"I
wanted to meet expectations of my customers who said they wanted to eat Japan's
best tuna again this year," Kimura was quoted by Jiji Press as saying
after the intense pre-dawn bidding.
"With
this good tuna, I hope to help cheer up Japan," Kimura said.
Based on
the price paid -- around 700,000 yen per kilogram -- a single slice of sushi
from the monster fish would cost diners as much as 30,000 yen.
But Kimura
plans to sell it at a huge loss, for a more realistic price of up to 398 yen
per portion, local media reported.
Bluefin is
usually the most expensive fish available at Tsukiji.
Decades of
overfishing have seen global tuna stocks crash, leading some Western nations to
call for a ban on catching endangered Atlantic bluefin tuna.
Japan
consumes three-quarters of the global bluefin catch, a highly prized sushi
ingredient known in Japan as "kuro maguro" (black tuna) and dubbed by
sushi connoisseurs the "black diamond" because of its scarcity.
A piece of
"otoro" or fatty underbelly can cost some 2,000 yen at high-end Tokyo
restaurants.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.