Saturday, July 15, 2023

Fears and suspicion of a Hong Kong ban on Japanese seafood that's triggered by politics rather than genuine safety concerns

  
Tuna from Shiogama at a high end sushi-ya in Hong Kong
may soon be a thing of the past :( 
 
Back in May 2019, I spent time in the Tohoku region of Japan.  I had such a great time there that I've been telling myself that I want to go back there again on my next Japan trip.  And while visits to places like Geibikei, Hiraizumi and Matsushima were trip highlights, I also loved the trip because of the great food I had, including over at a sushi-ya in Sendai and the seafood wholesale market in Shiogama, a port-town famed for having the largest catch of tuna in all of Japan

Flashforward a few years later when I was having dinner at a high end sushi restaurant here in Hong Kong.  Dinner that night included some tasty morsels of tuna (including prime otoro).  After having a particularly delightful piece of sushi, I asked the chef where the tuna was from.  After he said Miyagi (prefecture), I asked him whether he had got the tuna from Shiogama and mentioned that I had been there and, specifically, its seafood wholesale market.  Whereupon the chef rushed to the kitchen and came back with the chunk of tuna pictured above -- to proudly show me that the tuna we had eaten had come from Shiogama!
 
So imagine my horror upon reading this week that Hong Kong's Secretary for the Environment and Ecology, Tse Chin-wan, said this past Wednesday that "the Hong Kong government would immediately ban food imports from Tokyo, Fukushima, Chiba, Gunma, Tochigi, Ibaraki, Miyagi, Niigata, Nagano, and Saitama prefectures if the 1.33 million cubic metres of groundwater, rainwater and water used for cooling at the Fukushima site are released".  And by the way, Miyagi isn't only famous for Shiogama and tuna but also oysters!  As for the other prefectures on the list: Ibaraki is famed for its natto, Nagano for its apples, Niigata for its rice, Chiba for its nasshi pears (think Funassyi!) and so on, and so forth!

And finding out that it was "only" the seafood (“live, frozen, refrigerated and dried products or those preserved in other ways,” as well as sea salt and seaweed) that Hong Kong planned to ban from these 10 prefectures didn't make me feel better.  This because: for one thing, the tuna and oysters of Miyagi still would be included in such a ban; and for another, this revelation made the proposed decision seem even more preposterous on account of four of the ten mentioned prefectures (Nagano, Saitama, Gunma and Tochigi) being landlocked (and therefore having no seafood, right?).  

A closer look at this decision shows that Hong Kong would be following Mainland China's lead in banning food products from the 10 prefectures.  One key difference though is that whereas "the mainland... has banned all food products from the 10 prefectures", Hong Kong is limiting its ban to seafood.  Great, except whoever has made the decision for Hong Kong didn't seem to look all that carefully at what the 10 prefectures that the Mainland Chinese have decided to ban food products from and just went with their selection... and/or didn't seem to lack knowledge of Japanese prefectural geography!
 
This kind of carelessness and ignorance should be inexcusable given that the decision made affects a great many people.  "Among 18,000 licensed restaurants in Hong Kong, about 10 percent - or 1,800 to 2,000 - are Japanese, federation president Simon Wong Ka-wo told The Standard" this week.  
 
At the very least, the Hong Kong government should think carefully what they actually will be implementing.  In the same The Standard piece, Martin Chan Keung, a member of the board of directors of the Hong Kong Federation of Restaurants and Related Trades was reported to have stated that "trade may slump by half once the ban actually takes place, and 30 percent of Japanese eateries in Hong Kong may fold within two to three months".  
 
He also urged the authorities to provide more -- and presumably more detailed -- guidelines, as more than 80 percent of Japanese food products are exported via Tokyo -- where Toyosu, the largest fish market in the world (not just Japan) is located. ""If goods come from outside those 10 prefectures but via the port in Tokyo, will they be allowed into Hong Kong, or what? We want more information on that," said Chan, who owns a Japanese restaurant." 
 
And then there's the question if this proposed ban is a political act (one intimidated to be so in a Nikkei Asia piece entitled "Hong Kong becomes China's 'wolf warrior' in Fukushima water fight") or one that truly is the result of food safety concerns. The case for the former includes it being so that "hours after [International Atomic Energy Agency] Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi defended the agency's approval as scientifically sound, [John Lee] said he believes "there is not enough evidence on the reliability and legality of discharging that contaminated water into the sea at this point."  As the article opined: "Lee sounded very much like the Chinese General Administration of Customs"!  
 
If the latter, check out this explainer (also produced by Nikkei Asia) on how the Fukushima power plant will release its radioactive water.  (In short: with greater care than one might expect would be the case in *cough* certain other countries.)
 
Incidentally, I found this bit from the "Hong Kong becomes China's 'wolf warrior" article to be interesting indeed: Hong Kong currently is "the only place outside Japan where fresh catches brought to Tokyo's Toyosu market in the morning are served as sashimi the same night."  So the sense I've long had that Hong Kong is second only to Japan with regards to the freshness of its sushi and sashimi is indeed correct!  But for how long more will this be the case?  Especially if the Hong Kong government decides to ban seafood shipped from Tokyo (one of the prefectures on its 10 prefectures list) -- something which, remember, Martin Chan Keung feels that the government has not (yet) made clear!

8 comments:

peppylady (Dora) said...

Not much is on safety, just profit.
Coffee is on, and stay safe.

YTSL said...

Hi peppylady --

Actually, I believe that, in the case of Hong Kong, it's more a case of not much is on safety, just politics.

Paul said...

Digressing from this post ... planning to spend a couple weeks in Malaysia/Singapore and would love to have your advice as a foodie on the representative eats of each city:

Penang - CKT, Hokkien Mee, Assam Laksa, White Curry, Nasi Kandar, maybe Chendul?
Ipoh - Bean sprout and chicken, Hor fun, White Coffee, Big Tree Foot ytf?
Cameron Highland and Taman Negara - not expecting great food, but am I wrong?
KL - Currently planning to visit Pudu Wai Sek Kai, Chinatown area ... not sure what else
Melaka - Nyonya food in general, anything gula melaka, satay celup, chicken rice ball?, bah kut teh?
S'pore - Hawker centre stuff: chicken rice, bah kut teh, Hokkien Mee, curry fish head?, splurge on chili crab?

Thanks!

YTSL said...

Hi Paul --

Can't tell you much about Singapore: I tend to opt to eat "international" rather than "local" when there, and I've not visited in decades!

As for Malaysia:
Penang: add rojak, (Penang-style) chee cheong fan, nasi campur, and Mamak/Indian Muslim mee goreng and mee rebus to your list! Also, prefer ais kacang (known in other parts of Malaysia as ABC (ais batu campur) to cendol. (Note: in Bahasa Malaysia, "ch" is written as just "c". Oh, by "white curry", do you mean what Penangites call "curry mee"?) One last thing: Penang has Nyonya food too, not just Malacca!
Ipoh: My mother loves tofu fah there too (though, of course, me being in Hong Kong, I don't feel a need to get that when in Ipoh!)
KL: Kajang satay, Ampang yong tau foo -- and if you're in the area, Klang bak kut teh (the original, with a herbal soup that I way prefer to Singapore's peppery bak kut teh), nasi lemak (I know other parts of Malaysia have it but I think there's more variety in KL, including at its pasar malam. I personally love the nasi lemak that has cockles) and, actually, nasi campur.
Malacca: sorry, can't help. Haven't been there since I was 12!

Also, a general observation: you seem to have targeted primarily Chinese food. And even while Malaysian Chinese food is pretty good/different from other Chinese food, don't forget your Malay, Indian, etc. foods when in Malaysia!

Paul said...

I knew you'd make it so much more difficult by introducing me to so many options I won't have stomach room for!

At Penang I will keep an eye out for chee cheong fun since you mention that it's a different style, and make a mental note for rojak. For mamak food I may have to choose between nasi kandar and mee rebus. I actually have no idea what white curry is ... just something I read somewhere. Maybe it's just Penang style mee curry.

KL ... crap, you're now making me seriously consider setting aside a half day for either Klang or Kajang! And I will keep an eye on nasi lemak.

I do recognize that my choices are biased towards Chinese influences, due mainly to my wife's aversion to hot chilis which I'll have to try to navigate as we go. I do want more Malay food, and may incorporate more nasi lemak, mee rebus etc. when we're in rural areas (Taman Negara, Cameron Highlands). How do I ask for very mild spiciness in Malay?

YTSL said...

Hi Paul --

Hehe re making you aware of more options! And BTW, look out for nyonya kuih in Penang, and "dip dip" (aka "lok lok") too! ;b

BTW, there's also another style of chee cheong fan (from the Hong Kong street and dim sum versions) in Malaysia that I know about: which can be found in Ipoh and KL. It uses less prawn paste than the Penang version and throws in "yong tau foo" pieces. Not bad!

Re Malaysian food: it generally has spice but is not as hot as, say, Korea's can be, never mind Thai food, in the parts of the country you talked about going to -- though there are exceptions. E.g., the nasi lemak at Sri Weld in Penang is SPICY! But Kelantan is where I've had the spiciest Malaysian food. Just say "no chili" for most stuff and you should be okay. :)

Paul said...

Thanks for warning me about the spice level of Sri Weld's nasi lemak ... my hotel happens to be a 5 minutes walk away so I noted this as a breakfast possibility ... not anymore! But I will look out for Nyonya kuih, at Penang, Melaka and possibly Taiping ... if I successfully pull off a day-trip stopover there between Penang and Ipoh. Finding a local driver in Taiping for 8 hours (with luggage in the trunk!) is my biggest road block right now, and I'm not sure if I can trust Grab in smaller cities.

YTSL said...

Hi again Paul --

If you are going to be staying close to Sri Weld, do go eat there -- though, yes, maybe not its nasi lemak! Instead, would recommend the beef koay teow (that could be said to be a cross between Hong Kong's beef noodles and Vietnamese pho) at that particular hawker center/food court.

Speaking of hawker center/food courts: there's a nice Nyonya kuih stall at the food court attached to Cecil Street Market (along with other stalls). BTW, wouldn't expect to find Nyonya kuih in Taiping. ;b