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Narrator: In 2013, a 489-pound tuna sold
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for a whopping $1.8 million.
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But you can buy a can of tuna fish
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at the grocery store for under $2.
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So, what's the difference?
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For starters, it's not the same fish.
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Canned tuna typically comes from albacore.
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They're small, grow fast, and are abundant for fishing.
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And they certainly don't weigh 489 pounds.
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There's only one type of tuna in the world
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that grows that big, bluefin tuna.
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And if you wanna try some, it's gonna cost you.
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Derek Wilcox: We could buy tuna from Japan
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that we'd have to charge
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maybe $80 for one piece of otoro.
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Narrator: Derek Wilcox is a chef at Shoji,
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a Japanese restaurant in New York.
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He was trained in Japan and worked there
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for more than 10 years.
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Restaurants like Shoji serve raw bluefin tuna,
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or what's called kuro maguro in Japanese.
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They get their tuna from a number of different sources,
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including Japan's Tsukiji fish market.
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There are several different varieties of tuna,
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but bluefin is what you're most likely to find
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at high-end sushi restaurants.
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Wilcox: Bluefin is the most sought after.
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Only bluefin has the intense marbling.
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Bluefin also, when it's aged properly,
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has a particular balance of flavors.
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Narrator: A large adult bluefin can weigh
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around 450 pounds or more,
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and the price of the fish varies based
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on a number of different factors.
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Wilcox: It completely depends upon where you get it from,
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but it's never cheap.
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A local bluefin on the east coast will run
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anywhere between $20 and $40 a pound.
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You could be paying north of $200 a pound
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for bluefin from Japan.
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Narrator: According to Wilcox, tuna from Japan
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is better than American tuna during
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the peak winter months.
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While Boston tuna is best during summer and fall.
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But it's the tuna that comes from Oma in Japan
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that's widely considered to be
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some of the best in the world.
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Wilcox: Peak-season Oma tuna will, in Japan, cost
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400-450 a kilo.
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Which means by the time it gets here,
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it'll cost close to $400 a pound.
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Narrator: Besides its superior fat content,
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another reason fish is more expensive from Japan
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is that it has further to travel,
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and it goes through a rather lengthy process
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before making its way to your plate.
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Wilcox: There's more hands that it passes through
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in Japan, which is not necessarily a bad thing.
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Narrator: Wilcox says the fish is also handled
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better in Japan than the US.
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So there's less damage and more precise cutting.
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Wilcox: We get like a Boston bluefin,
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it goes from the fisherman, to the distributor, to our door.
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Whereas in Japan, it's going from the fisherman,
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usually to a collective or cooperative,
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to the government that's running the auction,
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to a middle wholesaler, to a final wholesaler,
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to a restaurant or a hotel.
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All high-end fish are auctioned in Japan.
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Fish that's more sought after, that's caught
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in a better place, that's handled better,
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that's clearly better quality will go for a higher price,
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and that fisherman will get more of the money.
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Narrator: The first auction of the year in Japan
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is when you'll see ridiculously high prices for fish.
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Mostly as a symbolic gesture, or a publicity stunt.
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Which is partly why the 489-pound tuna sold
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for $1.8 million in 2013.
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And the first fish of 2018 sold for $323,000.
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Wilcox: In Japanese culture,
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that first thing you do all year
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is the most important.
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It sets the tone for the whole year.
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That first tuna of the year always goes for
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the highest price that any tuna will
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go for the whole rest of the year.
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Narrator: And the different parts of a bluefin tuna
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also vary drastically in price.
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Wilcox: If you imagine a tuna as like a torpedo,
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they'll split it into quarters lengthwise,
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cut off the head, and the collar,
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and we will take one of the two belly quarters.
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Narrator: Here's what one quarter looks like
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when it's delivered.
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This piece came from Boston,
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and was caught the previous day.
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Wilcox splits up the meat based on type.
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Wilcox: It's just like sides of beef.
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You know, you buy a side of beef, it's all the same,
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but once you break it down,
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the filet ends up being the most expensive part,
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because it's the most desirable.
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It's also small,
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and it requires a lot of labor to peel
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off the silver skin.
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Otoro is the fattiest part of the tuna
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outside of the head and collar area.
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Narrator: This is the most expensive.
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And depending on where it's from,
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and where the fish was raised,
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the price can vary anywhere from $10 a piece
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to upwards of $80.
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Wilcox: The chutoro is getting around toward
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the side of the tuna,
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and it doesn't have the striations of fat,
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but it still has fat within the red of the meat,
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so you get a mix of fat and red.
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And then, akami which means, literally,
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red meat in Japanese,
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is the leanest part which you find more towards the center
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of the tuna closer to the backbone.
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Narrator: Akami is the most common
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and cheapest part of the fish,
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but it's still more expensive than
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that can of albacore at your local market.
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Wilcox: When you're assessing the quality of the tuna,
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you wanna taste the red meat, the akami.
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It's a wild animal, so it tells you whether
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it had a good diet,
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whether it had a good life,
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and it got exercise, and it lived in clean waters,
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and was able to swim around a lot.
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So, a farm-raised tuna is, generally, force-fed sardines,
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and you can actually taste sardines
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in the fat of a farm-raised tuna.
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Whereas a wild tuna has a varied diet,
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and has a much cleaner and milder flavor to the fat.
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Narrator: But for decades, wild bluefin tuna
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were over-fished in the Pacific,
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which was harming their population
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and making it more difficult to come by.
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However, more recently tighter controls on fishing
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have led to a resurgence in the population.
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But they could still be better, Wilcox says.
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In fact, Wilcox avoids any Pacific bluefin
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that is not from Japan,
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and says you should too.
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Wilcox: If you eat Pacific bluefin,
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not specifically from Japan,
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then that's really irresponsible.