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

Economy Lifestyle Food and Drink

Chinese Wagyū

Chinese livestock growers are also casting their hats into the wagyū ring. Most prominently, China’s Snow Dragon Beef has captured attention with its eponymous wagyū offering. Japan’s wagyū growers mix rice straw with the cattle feed as a digestive aid. Snow Dragon Beef’s parent company, Dalian Xuelong Industry Group is Japan’s largest foreign supplier of rice straw, and the interchange with Japan’s beef industry engendered the idea of cultivating wagyū cattle in China.

Dalian Xuelong Industry Group (Xuelong translates literally as “snow dragon”) created the Snow Dragon breed by mating native Fuzhou Yellow cows with Australian black-haired wagyū bulls via imported semen. Its Snow Dragon Beef subsidiary presently tends a herd of about 30,000 cattle at sites in Dalian, Liaoning Province, and Yantai, Shandong Province. Snow Dragon Beef emulates the Japanese practice of spoiling cattle with immaculate quarters, piped-in music, massages, and a rich diet of corn and grain supplemented with, of course, rice straw. The bovines bask in the coddling for 22 months before encountering their fate.

The Dalian Xuelong Industry Group set up a joint venture in Dalian in 2005 with the Japanese trading house Kanematsu Corporation and the Japanese meat processor Kamichiku to strengthen its position in wagyū. The joint venture, Dalian Kanematsu Xuelong Food operates a meat-processing plant that incorporates Kamichiku’s expertise and conducts distribution and marketing that incorporate Kanematsu’s expertise.

“Slicing the meat reveals marbling that is truly impressive,” marvels Meat-Companion’s Uemura. “They’ve come up with beef that ranks at grade 4 [on our five-level grading for marbling]. This is a real challenge for Japan’s producers.”

China’s insatiable domestic demand will shield Japan’s wagyū producers for the time being from the challenge perceived by Uemura. Snow Dragon Beef and other Chinese producers have their hands full just trying to serve their home market. But Japan’s growers will face a real threat if and when the Chinese turn their attention to the Japanese market.

The Threat Posed by Red Meat

The emphasis on marbling among Japan’s wagyū producers has increased as the result of trade liberalization. In April 1991, Japan replaced its import quotas on beef with tariffs, which it pledged to lower in 10% increments, and began allowing domestic wholesalers and retailers to import beef directly from foreign producers. A government agency had held a monopoly on imports under the quota system, and it had maintained a high price floor for the imported beef stored in its lockers.

Japan’s trade liberalization meant that the volume of imported beef would increase and that retail prices would decline. Domestically produced beef of standard grades would become uncompetitive with lower-priced imports. Japan’s beef producers therefore staked their survival on high-end wagyū, where they could assert a competitive edge in quality. Beef that features marbling of grade 4 or higher now accounts for about 60% of Japanese production.

Marbled shoulder roast from cattle grown in Hyōgo Prefecture

No sooner had Japan’s beef producers staved off extinction by focusing on marbling than they encountered a new threat. A growing number of Japanese are developing a taste for unmarbled red meat. High-grade wagyū beef ordinarily appears on menus as part of a carefully conceived, well-balanced array of dishes. Restaurants are popping up nationwide, though, that offer simple meals centered unreservedly on red-meat steaks of up to 500 grams.

Typical of the new trend in beef consumption are the steaks on offer at the Ikinari! Sutēki chain of steakhouses. That chain, run by Tokyo-based Pepper Food Service, opened its first outlet in Tokyo’s Ginza district in December 2013 and had grown to encompass 50 outlets by July 2015. And its staple fare is red meat from grain-fed cattle raised in Australia and in the United States for the Japanese market.

“Restaurants ordinarily serve wagyū steak in 50- or 60-gram portions in the context of multicourse dining,” explains Meat-Companion’s Uemura. “The beef is a delicacy to be savored—not something that people just scarf down. Someone with an appetite for hefty servings is bound to prefer the leaner flavor and consistency of red meat.”

Wagyū also encounters a growing challenge from red meat in export markets. Affluent diners are the principal consumers of wagyū beef outside Japan. And those diners are increasingly prone to view wagyū’s rich marbling in terms of high fat content and to eschew the meat on that account.

Red meat thus poses a threat to wagyū on multiple fronts. A further shift in consumer preferences toward leaner beef could bode ill for wagyū’s market prospects in Japan and worldwide.

next: A Flavor-Focused Strategy for Reclaiming Wagyū for Japan

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China United States beef wagyū Australia Japanese beef livestock industry

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