Friday, September 19, 2008

The History of Kobe Beef in Japan

By John W. Longworth


Eating meat from four legged animals was prohibited in Japan for more than a thousand years prior to 1868. This ban was especially strict during the Edo Period (1603-1867). Buddhist influences were primarily responsible for this dietary restriction, but other cultural factors and the need to protect draught animals in times of famine may have reinforced the taboo. After the Meiji Restoration in 1868, the new leaders of Japan wanted, among other things, to reduce traditional social barriers and to encourage the adoption of beneficial Western habits. There may also have been a desire to weaken the power of the Buddhists. Lifting the ban on the eating of meat was a small step towards these objectives. Nevertheless, it must have astounded the nobility of the day to see the young Emperor Meiji eating beef.
Meiji (1852-1912), emperor of Japan (1867-1912), born Prince Mutsuhito and the 122nd emperor in the traditional count, whose accession to the throne marked the beginning of a national revolution known as the Meiji Restoration.

Despite the formal rescinding of the prohibition against the eating of meat in the late 1860’s, the consumption of meat remained extremely low for another century. Until very recent times meat (niku in Japanese) usually meant pork in eastern Japan (roughly from Tokyo to Hokkaido) and beef in western Japan (from Nagoya/Osaka to Kyushu). Historically, and even today, the people of the Kinki Region (Kyoto, Kobe, and Osaka) have been the heaviest beef eaters.

For millennia the people of Japan lived on a diet of rice, vegetables, and seafood eaten with hashi (chopsticks). Although the meat taboo was removed over a hundred years earlier, by 1980 the average Japanese ate only 5.1 kg of beef (carcass weight basis). In some Western countries, where income levels are comparable with those in Japan, the average person commonly devours ten times this quantity each year. Although the younger generation has grown up with Western cuisine, knife and fork, most Japanese still enjoy beef best when it is prepared as very thin slices, cooked in the traditional manner and eaten with hashi.

From about 1955 onwards, the mechanization of rice cultivation led to an increase in the availability of beef, as large numbers of draught cattle were fattened and slaughtered. At the same time the rapid economic growth, which started with the Korean War boom, was gaining momentum. People could afford the luxury of meat more often.

Wagyu in Cows in Matsusaka are bought in Tajima (Hyogo), Shimane and Shikoku. There is no breeding in Matsusaka.

The Origins of Kobe Beef

The creation of genuine Kobe (or Matsuzaka or Omi) beef is a mystical folk art which may have been practiced as an underground cult before 1868. Some sources claim that certain daimyo and even some shoguns enjoyed especially fattened beef from Hihone hab (now Shiga Prefecture, the home of Omi beef). Most Japanese believe, however, that the art of producing Omi, Matusaka, or Kobe beef cannot be traced back to feudal times.

Kobe beef traditionally comes from Wagyu cattle. Wa” is a very old Japanese language term for Japan, or things Japanese, and one of the meanings of “gyu” is beef, with an “on the hoof” connotation. There are four commercial breeds of Wagyu:

Name of modern breed

Region and prefecture in which the breed developed

European breeds crossed with native cattle

% of national beef breed herd (1981)

Japanese Black

Kinki – Kyoto

Brown Swiss

87%

Kinki – Hyogo

Shorthorn, Devon, Brown Swiss

Chugoku – Okayama

Shorthorn, Devon

Chugoku -Hiroshima

Simmental, Brown Swiss, Shorthorn, Ayrshire

Chugoku – Tottori

Brown Swiss, Shorthorn

Chugoku – Shimene

Devon, Brown Swiss, Simmental, Ayrshire

Chugoku - Yamaguchi

Devon, Ayrshire, Brown Swiss

Shikoku – Ehime

Shorthorn

Kyushu – Oita

Brown Swiss, Simmental

Kyushu -Kagoshima

Brown Swiss, Devon, Holstein

Japanese Brown

Shikoku – Kochi

Simmental, Korean Cattle

9%

Kyushu - Kumamoto

Simmental, Korean Cattle, Devon

Japanese Poll

Chugoku – Yamaguchi

Aberdeen Angus

<>

Japanese Shorthorn

Tohoku – Aomori

Shorthorn, Dairy Shorthorn

Tohoku – Iwate

Shorthorn, Dairy Shorthorn

Tohoku – Akita

Shorthorn, Devon, Ayrshire

Source: Derived from Kiyoshi Namikawa, “Animal Genetic Resources in Japan,” in S. Barker (ed.). Proceedings of the SABRAO Workshop on Animal Genetic Resources in Asia and Oceania. NEKKEN SHIRYO No. 47, Tropical Agricultural Research Centre, MAFF, Japan.

These four breeds are now considered indigenous to Japan, but are not genuinely native cattle. There are two isolated populations of native cattle in existence. The Mishima wild cattle on Mishima Island (located in the Sea of Japan off Yamaguchi Prefecture) have never been crossed with modern European breeds. While they represent a genuine genetic curiosity, as of 1983 there were fewer than 40 head. The second, and more numerous, are a group of wild cattle on Kuchinoshima Island south-west of Kagoshima Prefecture. The progenitors of both the Mishima and Kuchinoshima cattle were probably brought to Japan by the ancestors of the modern Japanese people more than 2,000 years ago. Biochemical and genetic tests indicate that the native cattle are more closely related to the cattle of Northern Europe and Scandanavia than they are to the cattle indigenous to Taiwan, the Philippines, and other South East Asian Countries.

The four modern Japanese breeds are the result of a substantial infusion of European blood during the Meiji Era, together with a government-sponsored selection programme initiated in 1919. For several decades prior to 1910, there was a great interest in importing European breeds to cross with native cattle. The basic aim was to improve the native strains for draught purposes, but better meat production was also a consideration. Exotic breeds were extremely popular and the price of pure-bred and cross-bred exotic animals often reached unreasonable levels, until the bubble burst in 1910. After this date, the importation of European breeds went out of fashion.

After World War I, the Japanese Government decided to encourage the selection and registration of cattle exhibiting superior traits of both native and foreign types. There was a considerable gene pool to draw upon, as a wide range of European blood had been introduced to Japan. This variation, together with the original differences among the native cattle, permitted selection according to different criteria in various parts of the country. After World War II, the National Government moved to rationalize the registration process and formally recognized three major Wagyu types or breeds: Japanese Black, Japanese Brown, and Japanese Poll. The National Wagyu Cattle Registration Association was established in 1948.

The Japanese Black breed included several fairly distinct types, and this is still the case today (e.g. Tottori, Tajima, and Hiroshima strains). The Japanese Shorthorn was not formally established until 1957.

After careful selection and breeding over the last five decades, there are slight differences in the concept of the “true type” for each breed, but many similarities. All four breeds have been selected for beef production alone for more than forty years. In all four breeds the aim is to produce a medium-sized, beef-type animal. All of the breeds are humpless but the bulls tend to develop a marked crest. While the ideal mature body weight and height at the withers differ marginally between the four breeds, the targets for the Japanese Black are typical:

Male

Female

Body weight (kg)

940

560

Wither height (cm)

142

128

While it is hard to generalize, two traits of the Japanese Black often cited as disadvantageous are their narrow pin bones and their relatively poor milking capacity. The narrow pin bones create calving difficulties if the cows are crossed with bulls of the large-framed European breeds (such as Holstein or Charolais). The poor milking ability increases the costs of raising feeder calves since the calves often need artificial supplements.

On the other hand, the Japanese Blacks (in particular the Tajima strain) are noted for their capacity to produce beef with a high degree of fat marbling (or sashi). It is this characteristic more than any other which accounts for the steady increase in the popularity of the Japanese Black breed.

According to the website of the California BBQ Association, "In order to protect its domestic beef industry, the Japanese government imposed strict laws that prohibited the export of any living Japanese Wagyu cattle. However, in 1976, four Wagyu animals were imported into the U.S.: two Tottori Black Wagyu and two Kumamoto Red Wagyu bulls. Then in 1993, two male and three female Tajima cattle were imported, and 35 male and female cattle (consisting of both red and black Wagyu) were imported in 1994.

"Most Kobe Beef today is bred and raised in California and Australia. For example, Harris Ranch in California is contracted with beef producers in Kobe to breed and raise their cattle in California, where land and grain is relatively inexpensive. The cattle is raised and fed under the exacting specifications for Kobe Beef. When the cattle is almost ready for slaughter, it is shipped to Kobe, Japan, where its feeding is completed, and the cattle is slaughtered."



From Beef in Japan by Prof. John W. Longworth, University of Queensland Press, 1983. This book is currently out-of-print, and this information is used here with the kind permission of Prof. Longworth.

If any of this information has changed in the past 21 or so years, we would greatly appreciate it if you would please e-mail us. We will gladly update this information.

Photographs for Lucies Farm by Kjeld Duits.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Daging harga rendah dikhuatiri berpenyakit

KOTA BHARU 7 Sept. - Jabatan Perkhidmatan Vaterinar negeri menasihatkan orang ramai supaya berhati-hati jika ditawarkan harga daging lembu yang rendah kerana dikhuatiri ia haiwan seludup dan berpenyakit.

Pengarahnya, Datuk Dr. Mohd. Zairi Serlan tidak menolak kemungkinan banyak daging ternakan itu di dalam pasaran dan bersaing dengan daging tempatan ketika permintaan terhadap bekalan terus melonjak.

''Kita tidak menjamin daging tersebut bebas daripada sebarang penyakit yang besar kemungkinan mendatangkan kesan sampingan kepada pengguna," katanya kepada pemberita di pejabatnya di sini hari ini.

Menurut beliau, sepanjang lapan bulan pertama tahun ini, pihaknya merampas 2,612 ekor lembu dan kerbau bernilai RM344,000 yang diseludup dari negara jiran melibatkan 152 kes.

Beliau memberi jaminan bekalan daging menjelang Hari Raya mencukupi dan orang ramai tidak harus bimbang sehingga terdorong untuk membeli daging ternakan yang diseludup.

''Selain bekalan tempatan, ia juga ditampung dengan kemasukan daging import dan boleh didapati dengan mudah dan harga berpatutan," katanya

Tambahnya, sebanyak 3,000 ekor lembu dan kerbau dari ladang-ladang tradisional dan fidlot di negeri ini disediakan untuk membekalkan 360 tan metrik daging segar.

Selain dari itu katanya, 30 tan metrik daging beku dari India telah diimport untuk menampung bekalan. Bekalan kambing dan biri-biri baka kacukan tempatan hidup juga disediakan sebanyak 500 ekor yang akan menghasilkan 60 tan metrik daging segar.

''Keperluan daging ayam pula sebanyak 4,000 tan metrik dijangka dipenuhi dengan bekalan ayam sembelihan sebanyak 2.6 juta ekor ayam sebulan dari bekalan termasuk dari negeri lain.

''Telur ayam dan itik pula boleh dibeli dengan mudah di pasaran dengan bekalan melebihi 5.2 juta biji sepanjang bulan ini," katanya.

Mengenai harga beliau berkata, dengan bekalan yang mencukupi, harga daging dan telur dijangka stabil apatah lagi sebahagian daripada komoditi tersebut telah disenarai sebagai barangan kawalan.

''Daging lembu sembelihan tempatan pada harga RM15 sekilogram, daging kerbau import (beku dari India) RM8 sekilogram manakala daging kambing sembelihan tempatan berharga RM18 sekilogram,'' ujarnya.

Katanya, harga ayam standard (disembelih dan dibersihkan beserta kaki, kepala, hati dan hempedal), RM6 sekilogram, telur ayam gred A, 30 sen sebiji dan telur itik masin berharga 75 sen sebiji.

(Petikan dari Utusan )

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Pelajari teknik pembenihan keli


Peserta berpeluang mendalami teknik pembenihan ikan keli secara aruhan pada kursus yang diadakan pada 13 dan 14 September ini.


AgroHUB 2008 - 2010 meneruskan agenda pertanian negara dengan menganjurkan satu Kursus Pembenihan Keli Aruhan bagi melahirkan lebih ramai usahawan benih keli berilmu.

Kursus ini dianjurkan selaras dengan konsep ‘Pertanian Adalah Perniagaan’ yang memerlukan program pembangunan pertanian berterusan dan konsisten diteruskan oleh pelbagai pihak dalam usaha menjadikan pertanian sebagai enjin ketiga pertumbuhan ekonomi negara.

Kursus Pembenihan Ikan Keli Aruhan tersebut akan diadakan pada 13 dan 14 September ini di Pusat Latihan Belia Bukit Lagong, Selayang, Selangor.

Menurut Ketua Pengarah Projek AgroHUB Norzana Rafie, kursus tersebut diteruskan memandangkan permintaan tinggi terhadap latihan seumpamanya daripada pelbagai pihak khususnya golongan belia yang ingin menceburi industri berpotensi itu.

‘‘Selain itu, permintaan terhadap benih keli meningkat berkali ganda dan pengeluaran benih keli pada masa ini tidak dapat menampung permintaan yang begitu tinggi,’’ katanya.

Anak benih keli yang bermutu tinggi mendapat permintaan di luar jangkaan dengan harga seekor anak benih bersaiz tiga inci semakin meningkat daripada 0.08 sen kepada 0.15 sen seekor mengikut kuantiti yang diminta.

Dalam erti kata yang lain, masa depan terhadap ikan air tawar ini dilihat semakin cerah jika dilihat kepada trend permintaan ikan keli mentah dipasaran.

Kursus pembenihan ikan keli ini akan mendedahkan kepada peserta tentang kemahiran untuk menghasilkan benih ikan keli menggunakan teknik aruhan.

Teknik aruhan merujuk kepada suntikan hormon kepada induk-induk keli di mana telur yang diperah daripada induk betina dan sperma yang dibedah dari induk jantan akan disenyawakan untuk mendapatkan benih yang maksimum dan pensenyawaan yang lebih sekata.

Menurut Norzana, bagi meningkatkan kualiti dan tumbesaran rega dan anak benih, penggunaan Bio-Aqua akan digunakan bagi tujuan tersebut.

‘‘Bio-Aqua akan bertindak balas dengan oksigen dan sebatian air untuk meningkatkan tahap imunisasi dan sistem pencernaan dan pemakanan benih ikan.

‘‘Hasilnya, tempoh tumbesaran dapat dipercepatkan dan tahap penjagaan rega dan benih ikan dapat diminimumkan,’’ ujar beliau.

Peserta juga turut didedahkan cara ternakan benih sehingga usia matang iaitu bersaiz antara dua dan tiga inci yang sedia dijual dipasaran.

Makanan rega dan benih keli bermula hari keempat sehingga tempoh satu bulan setengah turut diajar kepada peserta.

Kursus kemahiran ini menarik kerana ramai peserta-peserta lepas telah memulakan industri ini, sama ada secara kecil-kecilan atau komersial dan telah mendapat pendapatan yang lumayan dari industri ini.

Ini membuktikan industri benih keli bertepatan dengan slogan Pertanian Adalah Masa Depan yang juga merupakan moto Projek AgroHUB.

Rangkaian usahawan benih ikan air tawar di bawah Projek Ketiga AgroHUB bakal dilancarkan November ini .

Di bawah projek itu , sebanyak 300 usahawan benih keli dan lain-lain ikan air tawar bakal dibentuk secara sistematik dan berkelompok dan dapat menyumbang ke arah pembangunan industri ikan air tawar negara yang masih kekurangan benih-benih ikan air tawar untuk menampung permintaan yang tinggi dalam negara.

Paling utama, usahawan-usahawan ini perlu menjalani proses latihan kemahiran dan menandatangani kontrak sebagai peserta Projek AgroHUB 2008-2010 agar kualiti ikan yang dihasilkan dapat dipantau dan diselaraskan.

Bagi mereka yang berminat mendalami kemahiran pembenihan keli aruhan boleh mendaftar diri sebagai peserta di talian 03-6187 3796.

(Petikan dari Utusan Online

Galah sambung untuk pemilik dusun


pelbagai jenis pisau yang dijual di syarikat ReachAll bagi memenuhi permintaan petani.


Ramai pekebun tidak kira sama ada yang menanam komoditi seperti kelapa sawit, kopi, koko atau dusun seperti rambutan, petai atau manggis memang menghadapi masalah mengait buah.

Mereka memerlukan galah yang panjang, biasanya diperbuat daripada buluh dan berbahaya semasa menggunakannya.

Justeru sebuah syarikat ReachAll ASDePro Enterprise telah berjaya menghasilkan galah yang bukan saja ringan tetapi juga boleh disambung sehingga mencecah 15 meter (45 kaki).

Pegawai ReachAll, Jefri Ishak berkata, galah itu mendapat permintaan yang amat menggalakkan daripada pekebun dan pemilik dusun.

“Galah sambung serbaguna ini sesuai digunakan oleh pekebun-pekebun kecil yang mempunyai kebun yang jauh dari rumah.

“Tentu saja mereka sukar membawa galah yang panjang di belakang motosikal dan juga mengundang bahaya kepada pengguna jalan raya lain,” katanya semasa ditemui pada Pameran Pertanian, Hortikultur dan Agro Pelancongan (MAHA) 2008 di Serdang, Selangor, baru-baru ini.

Setiap set galah sepanjang lima kali boleh disambung sehingga mencapai 15 meter mengikut keperluan pengguna.

Malah galah daripada campuran aluminium aloi yang berkualiti tinggi ini dapat dimuatkan dalam beg bagi memudahkannya dibawa dan disimpan.

Jefri menambah, set galah yang lengkap dengan getah pemegang dan beg bagi memudahkannya dibawa serta simpan malah mengelakkannya daripada kecurian.

“Set galah ini memudahkan kerja-kerja mengait bermula dengan ketinggian lima kaki dan boleh dipanjangkan dengan mudah dan cepat kerana lebih ringan.

“Galah sambung serbaguna ini boleh digunakan dalam pelbagai keadaan dengan menyambung di penghujungnya," katanya.

Sekiranya salah satu daripada galah rosak, pengguna hanya perlu membukanya dan pasang dengan yang lain dan kerja-kerja boleh diteruskan.

Pemasangan galah berkenaan juga amat mudah iaitu anda hanya perlu sisip, pusing dan klik. Begitu juga untuk membukanya.

“Selain galah, ReachAll juga memasarkan pisau sawit, pisau bunga sawit, pisau pinang, penyapu sawang, kacip rambutan, pisau kelapa dan gergaji dahan,” katanya.

Sesiapa yang ingin mendapatkan maklumat mengenai galah serbaguna ini bolehlah menghubungi ReachAll di 05-8914134 atau e-mel: asdepro@ spptsb.com atau laman web http://galahsambung.blogspot.com

(Petikan Utusan Online Oleh KHAIRUNNISA SULAIMAN)

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