Categorized | Dining Out

HK diners will kill for bluefin tuna

HK diners will kill for bluefin tuna

Here at Howzit-HongKong HQ we LUV our sushi!  However, when it comes to sashimi (despite having been a resident in Asia for ten years) I’m not so sure.  Be that as it may, HongKongers for sure LUV eating.  You name it, they eat it.  I lived in Ma On Shan in Hong Kong’s New Territories for just over a year and in that part of the SAR, snake soup is the meal most ordered during the current winter because in Chinese culture it is considered to be a ‘warming’ dish.

The headline story in the local papers (South China Morning Post/SCMP story below) over the last two days is surely the record price paid by a ‘consortium’ of a Hong Kong sushi outlet and it’s Japanese partners for a single blue-fin tuna.  A whopping 16.3 million Yen/ US$166,000/ HK$1.3 million was paid for what the WWF calls an endangered species.

(Click to read to SCMP story)

Needless to say, the local office of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) has been up in arms about the issue, launching an animated and colourful protest at outlets of the local sushi chain in question yesterday:

 

If you add in the US$250,000 Stanley Ho recently paid for a single Italian white truffle, Hong Kong’s rich and famous will surely leave no stone (or tuna) unturned to pay premium moola for the best of the best.  Endangered or not.

Kampai!

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This post was written by:

Mike Jansen - who has written 721 posts on howzit-hongkong.com.

Mike Jansen is a son of the Mother City (Cape Town) and decade-long resident of Asia. He currently resides in Kowloon's Hung Hom district, on the edge of the city's iconic Victoria harbour. He is also responsible for http://www.blitzbokke.com, a fan-site dedicated to the Springbok Sevens Team. Find him talking bollie on @BlitzBokke on Twitter

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