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  • If you watch a cooking show or anything on tv where food is being reviewed,

  • you always hear that phrase don't you, “melt in your mouth”.

  • It melts in my mouth.

  • It seems to be a substitute for actually thinking up an original opinion.

  • I mean, Why bother thinking when you can just say;

  • Oh this salmon melts in my mouth” “How extraordinary!”

  • So forgive me, when I tell you, that few things beat the sensation of having high grade, Japanese wagyu - beef melt in your mouth

  • - because it actually does, due to the high quantities of unsaturated fat,

  • streaking through the meat, giving it a beautiful marbled texture.

  • And because the fat melts at a low temperature, the beef dissolves in your mouth like butter.

  • That's rightIt..er..it melts in your mouth.

  • Now the most well known brand of Wagyu beef is Kobe beef

  • - but there is another level considered to by by food critics, to be superior and it's called Matsusaka Beef.

  • In fact one of the most expensive cows in history was sold in Matsusaka for a staggering 50 million yen.

  • Many people know that the secret to amazing Wagyu beef is the quality and care shown to the cattle.

  • That story you may heard of cattle being fed beer and given massages to help stimulate blood flow really is real.

  • And that was me massaging the cows. That what it really lookes like.

  • And tomorrow I'll be accompanying my friend Ryotaro to the the restaurant which owns the farm, that originally popularized that method,

  • to try some Matsuska beef first hand.

  • It's gonna be awesome.

  • - the only thing is it's in the city of Matsusaka about an hour from Nagoya,

  • and from Sendai (where we are now) to Nagoya isn't exactly driving distance we're going to have get up early tomorrow morning,

  • fly down, in some sort of upbeat montage sequence.

  • Good view.

  • Good view. Excellent view. Mt. Fuji.

  • You prefer boat or train?

  • Boat or train?

  • Boat!

  • So this morning, I've been on a plain. boat, bus, and now car.

  • We're finally here in Matsusaka city, in Mie prefecture.

  • About to try Matsusaka beef, the most expensive beef in Japan.

  • No, not quite.

  • What do you mean?

  • Before that, we need to climb up the cliff.

  • We need to climb up the cliff. What does that even mean?

  • Climbing up the cliff. You know what I mean.

  • Climbing up the cliff. You know what... I don't know what you mean.

  • What are you on about?

  • We need to be hungry enough to be able to appreciate the beef, right?

  • I am hungry enough, I've just been on a plane for an hour, and a boat, and a bus and a car

  • No no no no no, we need to be starving to the death

  • I am starving to the death

  • You're not!

  • I am!

  • See, look at your belly, you need to exercise more

  • Ohhh he didn't see last week's video

  • Holy cow

  • This is weird ain't it?

  • It looks like a hand coming out of the mountain

  • And there's a shrine under the hand, and that's the way you actually climb up

  • Oh my god! Good luck with that!

  • You!

  • Me?

  • I'll be watching you!

  • You're coming too!

  • No, I'll be watching you as you'll be climbing up, jumping off from the hand

  • Ise Sanjo is a mountain once used by monks to carry out spiritual training with a small shrine nestles beneath the cliff

  • However to get to it you have to free climb half way up a cliff which is considered to be half of the training

  • In fact Ise Sanjo literally translates a Powerful Mountain Top

  • I spoke with a 71st generation monk, Eisho Segi, the owner of the ... temple

  • about what I could expect from climbing up the mountain

  • No problem

  • No problem

  • I'm very strong

  • Chris! Should we go for it?

  • There's a chain

  • Yeah....screw that

  • Alright....easy!!

  • There are no safety ropes just a slippery metal chain

  • and whilst we had an experienced guide he was kitted out with climbing shorts and boots with a pair of gloves

  • I on the other hand had worn down trainers, a pair of jeans, I was unprepared

  • There's like no ropes attached here

  • If I fall, it's game over isn't it?

  • Yeah

  • What happened next was possibly one of the most dangerous things I've ever done

  • Go Chris! Go Chris!

  • Very good!

  • "very good!" you hear that?

  • I didn't hear it!

  • This is mental!

  • If you fall here

  • You're dead!

  • Yes, you're dead!

  • This is scary

  • There's no cable

  • There's no safety cable

  • I'm worried here

  • There's a vertical climb in my way

  • Look down!

  • So scary

  • That climb...saying that was one of the scariest things I've ever done, that is not an understatement

  • There's no safety cables, you're literally on a vertical cliff

  • with a chain and it is pretty scary

  • This looks like the Lion King

  • "Help me Brother!"

  • "Long live the King!"

  • This is not a climb suitable for anyone with vertigo

  • but the view is worth it, right?

  • If you survive it is quite pleasant

  • Matsusaka region is one of the largest growers of tea in all of Japan and there was no way we were gonna pass through the area

  • without trying some ourselves

  • On a scale of 1 to Picturesque views this is pretty picturesque

  • Like a 9...maybe a 10!

  • Don't know really but it's pretty damn cool!

  • I'm enjoying this view!

  • I'm a little bit on edge because there's a huge hornet over there, and if you don't know what a hornet is it's like a giant bee

  • Imagine a bee that got out of control, like the Godzilla of Bees

  • When you get stung by it, well it's not a happy end to the story, is it

  • Not really

  • Risking my life for a second time in this video, first falling off a climb, now filming next to a huge hornet

  • But again it's worth it for the view

  • So this region is the 3rd largest growers of tea in all of Japan

  • And..fucking hell I heard it take off

  • Who makes all these insects? Where do they come from??

  • Anyway let's go get some tea

  • So apparently this is the right temperature, 60°, to pour into the tea

  • So having mentally and spiritually fallen down a cliff to my death, there's no better way to relax your mind than drinking some Japanese tea

  • In a sort of traditional Japanese...drinking tea way

  • It's a bit difficult but actually there's a sheet on how to actually do it

  • It feels more like a ritual than drinking tea right?

  • Yeah it is! With this timer, and green tea and just..It's all ritually organized ...order

  • Now actually this makes yourself very special

  • Preparing the drink is as important as drinking it

  • When I look at this it's seems more like a way of relaxing, you know, rather than just drinking tea, there's a spiritual element involved

  • in a way that you don't get by downing a bottle of Coca-Cola

  • True!

  • Or even green tea out of a bottle

  • The tea ceremony is a lot more than just drinking tea is it

  • Next now..

  • Beef!!

  • BEEEEEEEEEEF

  • That is the stuff of nightmares

  • Geniuenly

  • The restaurant Wadakin dates back to the late 1800s where it started out as a beef shop, and today it's widely considered to be the home of Matsusaka Beef

  • with its very own farm to maintain quality control

  • I haven't been to a restaurant with this kind of famous reputaion, apparently it's very well-known throughout Japan and it looks like a hotel!

  • Given the size of it!

  • It's like a 5 story building!

  • For a restaurant!

  • So this floor has got ten rooms, it's VIP rooms, and underneath, like the 3rd floor, 2nd floor, they have got 20 rooms each

  • Oh wow!

  • We were given an almost intimidatingly large private room with our very own cook and a charcoal fireplace in the center of our table

  • So we've got 2 slices of very thin beef, coz it's Sukiyaki, it uses really thin beef, it cooks really fast

  • It's 13200 yen for just 2 thin slices so pretty expensive, it's the most expensive beef I've ever had

  • You an also get steak here as well

  • And it's 320 dollars for a cut of sirloin steak...Matsusaka Sirloin Steak...320 dollars....very expensive!!

  • Even the charcoal at Wadakin is special, being very easy to light giving off very little smoke

  • And enabling us to enjoy our meal in our tatami mat room

  • The beef is added to the pot while it's still cold and marinated with sugar and thick soy sauce

  • As the slices of beef cook rapidly in the pot

  • And finally the mouth watering beef is dipped into a beaten raw egg

  • to help bring out the flavor of the juicy beef, the sweet taste of the sugar and the salty taste of the soy sauce

  • This is something that, you know, I've been dreaming of eating

  • As this like the number one beef, the most expensive beef in Japan

  • You're gonna break your neck in a minute with all this nodding

  • The sukiyaki, the flavor of the soy sauce, and everything is just all perfect!

  • Speechless! Well i'm speaking now..

  • Breathtaking flavor!

  • Speechless but I'm speaking..

  • How is it?

  • How's that?

  • That's amazing! The fact that it just tore off so easily...

  • I don't have to really chew it it's just breaks up in my mouth

  • I know that's what you were going to say

  • Oh no!! I enjoyed it so quickly it's over!

  • It's over!

  • When I picture steak or beef, I picture chewing a lot, there was no chewing involved it sort of dissolved on impact

  • Like magic!

  • And the egg really brought out the flavor and quite nice sweet taste to it thanks to the sugar and the sauce that was put on

  • And it tasted better than steak

  • because it had a lot more flavor to it

  • It's so complex isn't it the flavor

  • This is the most complex beef I've ever had

  • 10 out of 10!

  • Would buy again...but can't because it's too expensive

  • Especially in this atmosphere

  • If you're a lover of beef, Matsusaka beef should be at the very top of your list to try

  • If you're interested in visiting any of the places we visited in this video you can find the details in the description box below

  • Amazing what you can get done when you get up really early at 5 a.m. isn't it?

  • You can see Mount Fuji, you can nearly fall down a cliff, you can nearly get stung by a hornet overlooking a beautiful field of tea

  • And you can go to the best steak restaurants in Japan

  • All if you get up at 5 a.m!

  • You can go from Tokyo Station to Matsusaka in just 3 hours via bullet train to Nagoya and then switching to a local train

  • or the area is easy to access by Chubu International Airport by boat

  • Many thanks for watching guys, I'll see you next time!

  • Go Ryotaro, get closer!

  • You can do it!

  • You have to walk closer to it, mate

  • Go ahead, go ahead!

  • We're a team!

  • I thought that you were immune to the hornet

  • You told me that before!

  • Immune to the hornet?

  • When did I say that?! "Immune to the hornet!"

  • You said it yesterday!

If you watch a cooking show or anything on tv where food is being reviewed,

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