| The public Sold out coast to coast decade after decade
 
 money talks
 money screams
 
 A Kobe Beef steak capitalism
 
 Some,  Bush come in heavy $$$
 are paying $1 to get 8 cents
 his crybaby moneymen are shitting their pants, youcansmellthestink
 coming off them.
 
 Trump
 comeing in light , needs 3 cents to buy a dollar.
 
 Kobe Beef
 
 Food's Biggest Scam: The Great Kobe Beef Lie
 
 
  These are cuts of the famous Kobe beef from Hyogo prefecture in Japan. Note the exquisite marbling of fat throughout. To see it in person, you need to go to Japan, because real Kobe beef cannot be found in the U.S. Photo: Wikipedia 
 Think you’ve tasted the famous Japanese Kobe beef?
 
 Think again.
 
 Of course, there are a small number of you out there who have tried it – I did, in Tokyo, and it is delicious. If you ever go to Japan I heartily recommend you splurge, because while it is expensive, it is unique, and you cannot get it in the United States. Not as steaks, not as burgers, certainly not as the ubiquitous “Kobe sliders” at your trendy neighborhood “bistro.”
 
 That’s right. You heard me. I did not misspeak. I am not confused like most of the American food media.
 
 I will state this as clearly as possible:
 
 You cannot buy Japanese Kobe beef in this country. Not in stores, not by mail, and certainly not in restaurants. No matter how much you have spent, how fancy a steakhouse you went to, or which of the many celebrity chefs who regularly feature “Kobe beef” on their menus you believed, you were duped. I’m really sorry to have to be the one telling you this, but no matter how much you would like to believe you have tasted it, if it wasn’t in Asia you almost certainly have never had Japan’s famous Kobe beef.
 
 2014 UPDATE: Changes have occurred regarding the status of Kobe beef in the United States. For the most current information, please read the 2014 piece,  The New Truth About Kobe Beef, which has details that supersede information contain herein.
 
 You may have had an imitation from the Midwest, Great Plains, South America or Australia, where they produce a lot of what I call “Faux-be” beef. You may have even had a Kobe imposter from Japan before 2010. It is now illegal to import (or even hand carry for personal consumption) any Japanese beef. Before 2010 you could import only boneless fresh Japanese beef, but none was real Kobe. Under Japanese law, Kobe beef can only came from Hyogo prefecture (of which Kobe is the capital city), where no slaughterhouses were approved for export by the USDA. According to its own trade group, the  Kobe Beef Marketing & Distribution Promotion Association in Japan, where Kobe Beef is a registered trademark, Macao is the only place it is exported to – and only since last year. If you had real Kobe beef in this country in recent years, someone probably smuggled it in their luggage.
 
 
 
 
 
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