Bangkok Post

Tuna goes for $145,290 as pandemic dampens auction

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The buyer of a $145,290 tuna at Tokyo’s traditiona­l New Year auction said yesterday that he hoped the purchase would “brighten” a Covid-hit 2022.

The top price paid for a tuna at the first auction of the year at Tokyo’s Toyosu fish market fell for the third year running, with demand hit by the pandemic.

The 16.88 million yen shelled out jointly by a restaurant operator and a wholesaler for the huge bluefin tuna yesterday was far below the 2019 record of 333.6 million yen.

The first tuna auction of the year at Toyosu market is a closely-watched tradition that draws a horde of fish wholesaler­s every year.

Bidders sometimes shell out an enormous amount to win the top-priced tuna, which is seen as bringing good luck, as well as plenty of publicity for the buyer.

The top-priced 211-kilogram fish was caught off the northern Aomori region of Japan, famous for its quality tuna, and went to Michelin-starred sushi restaurant operator Onodera Group and Japanese wholesaler Yamayuki.

Hours after the early-morning auction, the prize fish was delivered to a restaurant operated by Onodera in Tokyo’s upscale Omotesando neighbourh­ood to be publicly sliced and filleted.

“I participat­ed in the auction hoping to get the top-priced tuna, which is considered auspicious, and serve it to our customers to brighten their year ahead a little, even as our world remains marred by the pandemic,” head chef Akifumi Sakagami told AFP.

“The tuna will be offered to customers both in Japan and at the firm’s restaurant­s abroad, including in Hawaii, New York and Los Angeles,’’ he added.

Sushi enthusiast­s gathered outside the upscale Tokyo restaurant to await the tuna, eager for a morsel.

Junko Kawabata, 78, said she had jumped on the expressway from her home in eastern Tokyo for the chance to taste the top-priced catch.

“I just love tuna,” she said, proudly displaying a numbered ticket indicating she would be the first customer to be served. “I can’t wait to eat a piece of it.”

Another sushi lover, 59-year-old company employee Mitsuaki Tsubota, also arrived early to get a ticket.

Tsubota, whose workplace is across the street from the Onodera restaurant, said he would pop out of the office during his lunch break to enjoy the tuna.

“That would be a very luxurious lunch,” he said with a grin.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A 211-kilogram bluefin tuna that was auctioned for $145,290 and bought jointly by Michelin-starred sushi restaurant operator Onodera Group and wholesaler Yamayuk is carried into a sushi restaurant in Tokyo’s upscale Omotesando neighbourh­ood.
REUTERS A 211-kilogram bluefin tuna that was auctioned for $145,290 and bought jointly by Michelin-starred sushi restaurant operator Onodera Group and wholesaler Yamayuk is carried into a sushi restaurant in Tokyo’s upscale Omotesando neighbourh­ood.

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