The World of “Wagyū”: Aussie Challengers Closest to Perfecting Japanese-Style Beef

Economy Lifestyle Food and Drink

Two Pioneers in Globalizing Wagyū

Australian cattle growers began importing wagyū in 1989. US growers and universities had earlier imported some live wagyū cattle for the purpose of animal husbandry research, and the Australians secured their first wagyū in the form of bull semen and frozen embryos imported from the United States.

The destination for about 80% of semen and embryos in the first decade of Australian imports was a farm run by David Blackmore. A fifth-generation farmer, Blackmore has led the growth and development of Australia’s wagyū industry. He made the acquaintance of the Hokkaidō livestock grower Takeda Shōgo in 1992 and soon began importing wagyū semen and embryos from Takeda’s farm. Takeda also exported live wagyū to the United States in a series of shipments that continued until 1996. He and Blackmore concluded an exclusive export-import agreement for semen and embryos in 1994.

Takeda had embarked on the exportation of wagyū genetics with a sense of mission: He was determined to disseminate the delectable appeal of wagyū worldwide. But his fellow cattle growers in Japan were aghast at what they regarded as giving away their industry’s crown jewels. The Wagyū Registry Association admonished Takeda to cease his exports of wagyū genetics and expelled him in 1997 after he refused to comply.

Takeda’s exports of wagyū semen and embryos have elicited mixed appraisals. To be sure, they violated no law or regulation, however much they might have troubled Takeda’s Japanese counterparts. And Takeda has earned plaudits in some quarters as a pioneer in propagating Japanese culinary culture internationally. But he has also come under attack for selling precious intellectual property that could be regarded as a shared asset.

Blackmore first encountered wagyū during a 1988 visit to Texas A&M University’s research farm. The cattle captured his imagination, and he resolved to grow them in Australia. Blackmore began by cultivating “purebred” wagyū cattle—at least 93.5% pure—on account of the lack of 100%-pure, “fullblood” embryos. He later shifted his focus to fullblood wagyū as a sufficient supply of embryos became available. By the end of the 1990s, Blackmore was building a herd of fullblood wagyū.

Several Australian livestock growers began breeding wagyū in the late 1980s, and they established the Australian Wagyū Association in 1990 to advance their common interests. That association, like its Japanese counterpart, maintains rigorous quality standards for wagyū beef and provides diverse support aimed at promoting advances in wagyū breeding and husbandry. The Australian Wagyū Association reports that the number of wagyū in Australia has reached about 300,000—approximately one percent of the total number of cattle in the nation.

A Domestic Focus and Fuzzy Definition for US Wagyū

How US livestock growers allowed the Australians to lock up most of the world’s wagyū markets outside Japan warrants examination. The United States was the first nation to import live wagyū cattle from Japan. That was in 1976, when the University of Colorado obtained four wagyū bulls—two Japanese Black and two Japanese Brown.

US growers subsequently crossbred the imported cattle with local breeds. Repeated crossbreeding between fullblood wagyū and mixed-blood offspring raised the genetically wagyū concentration. And US growers ultimately attained the purebred concentration of at least 93.5%.

Continuing input from Japan fueled the US breeding effort for 22 years after the first imports of wagyū in 1976. During that span, Japanese growers exported 247 wagyū cattle and 13,000 frozen wagyū semen doses to the United States. The Japanese cut off the exports in 1999, however, in the aim of preserving their exclusive hold on the breeds.

Prompting the US imports was the notion of serving the Japanese market with US-produced wagyū beef. The US product proved uncompetitive, though, in the Japanese market. So the US wagyū producers abandoned their hope of gaining a foothold in Japan and turned their attention to the domestic market. They have since concentrated on promoting their beef as a high-value-added option for the American table.

The American Wagyū Association reports that US production of its namesake cattle and beef centers on the states of Texas, California, Oregon, Missouri, and Washington and that the United States’ aggregate wagyū herd comprises 3,000 to 5,000 fullblood cattle, 5,000 to 10,000 purebred cattle, and about 40,000 cattle of up to 93.4% wagyū blood. The latter consist mainly of wagyū-Angus crossbreeds, according to the association. US Department of Agriculture figures indicate that the US herd of all breeds totaled some 88 million cattle as of January 1, 2014. So the wagyū cattle—even as defined generously—account for considerably less than 0.1% of the total.

Angus—principally Black Angus—and Hereford—a red-and-white-haired breed—are the main sources of beef in the United States. The former has earned a reputation for tender meat that features an appealing balance of white fat marbling and red musculature. Wagyū has exerted a powerful, albeit niche, appeal in the US market with its tenderer-than-Angus succulence and its richer-than-Angus marbling. That appeal has meshed well with the mounting American interest in Japanese cuisine.

A troubling issue with the US wagyū market in the eyes of purists is its fuzzy definition of the meat. US restaurants commonly serve meat under the name of “wagyū” or “Kobe beef” that is from cattle of barely 50% wagyū blood. That sort of labeling—misleading at best—would be unthinkable in the better-established wagyū markets of Japan and Australia.

next: Chinese Wagyū

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