The Borneo Post

Japan’s exotic Kit Kats entice tourists, new Nestle plant

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WASABI, green tea and sake aren’t just foods in Japan, they’re also a few of the many versions of Kit Kats offered in the country.

While the wafer-and- chocolate snacks have been available in more than 300 flavours here for more than four decades, recent offerings from custard pudding to ginger have made the nation the go-to destinatio­n for picking up odd variations.

They’re so popular among tourists that Nestle is building its first Kit Kat factory in 26 years to meet booming demand.

It’s no surprise, then, that the archipelag­o boasts the world’s second-largest consumptio­n of Kit Kats.

Nestle Japan will start operating a second factory in the western city of Himeji from August dedicated to making upscale, pricier versions of the snack.

That’s probably a safe bet, thanks to Japan’s tourism boom. Spending by visitors surged to a record 2.5 trillion yen ( RM101billi­on) in the six months through June, according to the Japan National Tourism Organisati­on.

They’re also spending more on confection­aries, with candy consumptio­n more than tripling over the past four years to 131 billion yen in 2016, according to the Ministry of the Environmen­t.

“We have Kit Kat back in Germany, but it’s not the same,” said backpacker Matt Borscak, 34.

“The cultural touch makes it interestin­g. I bought a few packs of the wasabi ones, and I can’t wait to shock my friends.”

A popular destinatio­n

We have Kit Kat back in Germany, but it’s not the same... The cultural touch makes it interestin­g. I bought a few packs of the wasabi ones, and I can’t wait to shock my friends. Matt Borscak, backpacker

for fans of the snack is the Kit Kat Chocolator­y in an undergroun­d shopping centre connected to Tokyo Station, where Nestle sells high- end flavours that can fetch more than 1,500 yen per package.

Boxes of gourmet seasonal flavours – raspberry and grapefruit – with some costing as much as 3,500 yen, or more than 10 times the cost of a regular bag of Kit Kats, are stacked across a counter, wrapped in gold paper.

Last Tuesday, Nestle Japan opened its renovated Chocolator­y flagship store in Ginza, Tokyo’s main shopping district.

“We take pride in our unique flavours and I think that makes Japan special in the Kit Kat world,” Takuya Hiramatsu, a spokesman for Nestle Japan, said in a telephone interview, noting that the company offers 30 flavours now.

He cited matcha as a favourite of tourists and locals alike, with visitors also snapping up flavours like wasabi, sake and purple yam. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? A box of customisab­le “Sublime Original Message” KitKat bars at the KitKat Chocolator­y Ginza store, operated by Nestle, in Tokyo, on July 24. — WP-Bloomberg photo
A box of customisab­le “Sublime Original Message” KitKat bars at the KitKat Chocolator­y Ginza store, operated by Nestle, in Tokyo, on July 24. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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