The Borneo Post

People are game for gibier cuisine

- Rie Hayashi

“GIBIER” cuisine featuring meat from wild animals, such as deer and wild boar, is rising in popularity. Gibier — the French word for game meat — is o en associated with luxury, or having a peculiar taste and smell.

However, recently there has been an increasing number of new ways for people to experience gibier cuisine.

At “French Izakaya UWASHIMA” in Sumida Ward, Tokyo, venison tacos have been served since November, in sync with the current deer-hunting season in Japan.

The dish uses deer shank and other parts of the Hokkaido Yezo sika deer, simmered with vegetables and are served in tortillas.

The tacos have been popular, mainly among female customers, with one saying, “It has a light and delicious taste with none of the gaminess.” They are sold for 1,200 yen.

The restaurant also offers deer steak every hunting season. But this season, through venison tacos, which can be eaten casually with one hand, the restaurant hopes it can make it easier for customers to enjoy gibier.

Owner and chef Yoshiyuki Uwajima, 47, who gained experience working in French restaurant­s, says, “Gibier is a common ingredient in French cuisine. Venison is aromatic and easy to eat and has become more popular in recent years in Japan. I hope that those who are usually unwilling to try new things will give it a chance.”

“Wine Bar Bologna” in Shinjuku Ward, Tokyo, began serving Bolognese using wild boar meat for 1,680 yen this autumn.

The bar owner says, “Although many people are unfamiliar with wild boar meat, its feral, sweet flavor has been welcomed as something new.”

At Beck’s Coffee Shop, a cafe chain run by East Japan Railway Co., gibier curry rice is offered every fall.

The curry is a hit among curious customers trying game for the first time.

The cafe chain sold 11,000 plates from September 2023. Servings ended in November.

Although gibier has an image of being served at high-class restaurant­s or as regional cuisine, it is now being enjoyed in everyday cooking, with products being sold at stores, indicating its spreading popularity.

MUJI stores, run by Tokyobased Ryohin Keikaku Co., has been selling two types of retort pouch curries, one with wild boar and the other with venison, in limited quantities since 2021.

In November, the Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries Ministry and others set up the website National Gibier Fair 2023 (h ps:/ www.gibier-fair.jp/).

The website showcases a variety of menus, including a ramen chain whose gyoza contains deer meat and a dining bar’s deer shank and root vegetables pot-au-feu.

It shares informatio­n on about 1,500 restaurant­s and stores, including e-commerce sites that sell gibier products online.

Lying behind the national government’s efforts to increase consumptio­n of game is the serious damage caused to crops by wildlife.

According to the farm ministry, crop damage in fiscal 2022 cost 15.6 billion yen and deer and wild boars accounted for approximat­ely 60% of the total damage.

“We consider captured wild animals as a local resource and would like to make effective use of them for gibier cuisine,” said an official in charge of the nationwide project.

According to the Japan Gibier Promotion Associatio­n, an organisati­on based in Nagano, the meat of deer and wild boar is rich in nutrients, such as vitamins and iron.

Norihiko Fujiki, 52, representa­tive director of the associatio­n, says, “Deer meat has well-developed lean muscles, so you can fully enjoy its umami. Wild boar meat is sweet, and its melt-in-your-mouth fat is irresistib­le.”

Toshiyuki Ozaki, 41, of Gurunavi, Inc., a Tokyo-based company that runs an online gourmet restaurant guide, said, “The spread of values emphasizin­g sustainabi­lity and the fact that wild game is now sold at chain restaurant­s and stores close by have increased people’s interest in wild game, particular­ly among young people, including those in their 20s.”

As wild game has also come to be used in popular South Korean dishes such as bulgogi and bibimbap in Japan, he adds, “The opportunit­ies for people to enjoy gibier cuisine is likely to increase further.”

Deer meat has well-developed lean muscles, so you can fully enjoy its umami. Wild boar meat is sweet, and its melt-in-your-mouth fat is irresistib­le.

Norihiko Fujiki

 ?? — Photo by The Japan News ?? Owner-chef Yoshiyuki Uwajima prepares tacos using deer meat at ‘French Izakaya UWASHIMA’ in Sumida Ward, Tokyo.
— Photo by The Japan News Owner-chef Yoshiyuki Uwajima prepares tacos using deer meat at ‘French Izakaya UWASHIMA’ in Sumida Ward, Tokyo.

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