fun fact japan import for 15billion of $ of sea food each year, and 90%of their own catch are eaten by them, half of fish they eat is bought to foreign fishermen...most of them are chinese which ffish fleet rule the pacific. since its a wealthy country they can afford high valuable sea food like tuna, crab, lobster, shrimp, salmon which they bought from all over the world...they are the 3rd fish market in $ despite be a 120million people country....so what you see is that japan concentrate on rising valuable fish, and buy world other valuable sea food....in opposition poor countries/sailor eat the less valuable catch, and sell expensive species to big market like usa/japan/china.
Yeah that's why I rarely see Japanese people in the RUclips comment section. I once came across a master that spend the last 15 years on honing his skills on writing the perfect RUclips comments. I felt deeply honored by witnessing his dedication 🙏
Eel is definitely difficult to filet, because its so fkin slimy but to say it would take years is bs. Id say it takes a week if you do it every day all day long.
@@faitodeyo7019 Yeah but a lifetime to master grilling them? Lets be serious. They probably say that to keep the price really high. "Oh too hard to learn how to cook, so must charge high price"
Haha, they just don't want to understand that they are overfishing and overuse. Profits above all. The hell if they ho extinct. LOVE NATURE RESPECT NATURE ❤
I mean….I think it’s kind of explanatory. This is an unsustainable industry, you can’t just expect to catch all the young eels and expect their native populations to sustain themselves,
I've heard there's been research being done to sustainably hatch and raise eels without resorting to outsourcing glass eels from the wild. I'm not entirely sure how far along the research is but here's to hoping for sustainability.
@@phestojen7966 Even with farmed stocks, which is still long ways off, I doubt it will be sufficient to meet demand. And there’s no guarantee that a sustainable option will be available before the complete depletion of natural wild stock.
fun fact: Chinese eels are 1/2 or 2/3 cheaper than Japanese eels. All eels are wild caught and farm raised. Lots of Japanese eels are actually imported from China and rebranded in Japan.
If you actually lived in Japan, you'd know that most of this work is also done by part-timers. This whole "it takes a lifetime to master" shit is just BS they like to say to gin up tourism.
So they never ACTUALLY said that the problem is that they are taking all the baby eels from the wild because they haven’t figured out how to breed them in captivity, and so every year there are less and less eels to catch because there aren’t enough left to breed new babies. Way to go human greed 🙄
exactly it's so stupid if they released even a quarter of the full grown eel's they might not have to declining numbers and the risk of so much lost income to
I mean... if we look as to why they couldn’t breed eels in captivity as efficiently as farm factories, it would make sense Since THERES STILL NO ANSWER AS TO HOW EELS REPRODUCT
So what are they gonna do? Stop catching them? They said it's a big part the economy, so a lot of restaurants would go out of business and the economy could take a huge hit from it. It's easy enough to say what you said, but actually doing it is way harder. The video also said that there currently *is* effort being made to improve the situation, but it isn't enough apparently. You also say getting rid of a fourth of their eels is a good idea, but if you recall, restaurants are still dependent on a high enough quantity of eel. On top of that, prices would skyrocket higher than they already are, and people would stop buying as much. I'm sure you can see the economical cost that would come from that. At this point it isn't about greed, but about people's livelihoods. Also to the person who mentioned eel reproduction, not sure what you want to know specifically about it? I can tell you a few things, unless you are referring to the fact that we can't figure out the exact process, physiologically.
If Im not mistaken, the reproduction of eels is actually a mystery we have yet to solve. It’s been like that for hundreds of years. If Im not mistaken, European eels only apear in regular siting areas as adults without sex organs. They go upstream and enter and entirely different life stage, and mate somewhere out at sea where we still haven’t found. If japanese eels are similar than this isn’t easy. The reason they’re catching babies isn’t just because they’re idiots Its because we don’t know how to breed them. And of corse if a farmer has put in the work and money to raise them, generally they’re going sell what they’ve spent money on to buy and raise to be eaten. Don’t act like there’s an easy way out because there’s not. It’s even possible that captive-raised eels are missing something they would have gotten in the wild, something that would have made them unable to breed regardless if they were released (Im thinking this possibility is about 35% likley but Im just guessing)
I just signed up for a course (how to properly grill an eel) in Japan and the length of this course is 100 years. I am super excited to be a grill eel master.
All Jokes aside about the "years to master thing" the part about slicing eel he ain't joking about. Having worked as a fish monger in the past for about 2 years I can tell you properly butchering (slicing) the eel is seriously one of the hardest things to do. It's super slippery, you can damage the good meat if you aren't careful. Since freshness is key (live killing just before using as food) doing it fast and in a way that keeps the good meat in tact is definitely hard. Now the 9 years part? idk about all that but it definitely takes "years to master"
@Jared D No, that's a way to describe the Japanese method for preparing seafood of the highest freshest quality. By "preparing live" refers to killing the fish instantly and right after beginning the butchery process.
haha. I fish when I was younger. When we see eel that is rare, we can't even catch it. It's slippery slope as they say. It's like all the lubes in the world put on this slimy thing.
Yes.. I'm so fed up with those dumb comments mocking artisan. They are sloppy workers who think they have mastered something when they does shitty job.
@@redwarriorXYTRUclips Japan is especially difficult in that case. They overfish and eat everything. Not to shame them, but their culture honestly makes maintaining some species alive a very difficult task
@@sofadudeman what do you mean don’t act like what? tf Just because it about Japanese eel doesn’t mean it has anything to do with eco system and preventing fishing when the problem isn’t just japan, literally many other countries done the same and why don’t you guys solve it then just complain and shit, idc about the problems but blaming a country because they didn’t do it when their own countries and doing the samething is just bullshit.
@@redwarriorXYTRUclips ????? bro…. the commenter did NOT insult japan, they just said they wished japan had the same passion for preventing over-fishing. there was no blaming. don’t try to bring other countries to defend japan. It’s just a misunderstanding, we don’t have to argue over it.
Why Japanese Eel Is So Expensive? 👎👎Because it's all radioactive Eels !!!! LMAO Greenpeace just tested all Japanese fishes, there were high level of Cesium was detected in fishes and produces from Japan and many countries banned Japanese products for these reasons!
Japanese people really knows how to market their product where the price could be triple or quadruple than your average, for example Square watermelons, white strawberry ,eels and etc..
Americans are about quanity, XXXL pizza with 6 types of cheese and cheese stuffed crust on a bed of cheese. Comes with 2 gallons of neon colored sugar water and a garbage bag of fries
@@genderfluidsneutral4591 we also like High ABV in our beer.. But My Filipina Wife likes that too .. My wife lived in Tokyo and said everything was too expensive and not worth the money... She also lived in Dubai and had the same complaint.. Now she is with me in Texas and has more food and Beer than she knows what to do with... Yep we super size everything and always at half price....
@@greenfungus1 I bet she prefers to eat at home, and eats lots of rice. I'm asian as well and I can eat pizza, burgers etc. But I need rice at least once a day usually for dinner.
@@genderfluidsneutral4591 Yep lots of rice... Breakfast time with Eggs, Later with pork or chicken oh and lot's of fish and seafood too... We had Chicken Paws and rice just now..
When Japanese people say “it takes years to master”, what it really means is that you will never reach “perfection” but you work towards it. Dont be satisfied and stop working on your passion. Be humble and keep on improving. Its just a Japanese cultural mindset when it comes to craftsmanship. A Japanese craftsman or an artist could work on something for most of their lifetime and he will NEVER claim that he has “mastered” it. It could be the lack of translation in these videos but I wanted to point that out.
This obsession with "mastering" every skill and over-emphasis on taking "years to master", has kept many Japanese employees from fitting in well in US corporations. Most American companies have an emphasis more on production rather than quality. They tend to have a "the perfect is the enemy of the good" philosophy. Can't tell you how many bosses I've had who've pulled me aside and basically said "Just get 'er done", when they perceived I was focused too much on getting something perfect.
I feel like they make everything into this hyper perfect art-level goods that it sucks the joy out of trying anything new. Since everything needs to be so perfect, there no reason for people to explore things for leisurely interests. Although the perfection mindset gives stellar products, at the end of the day no perfect product will bring you joy.
@@echizennishida9554 I definitely agree....but Japan is known for its suicide rates and work-to-the-bone culture now....I don't feel like they are finding much joy. (Just my opinion, not to offend anyone)
@@davve5657 overfishing mean in theory there is more fish how ever you are not allowing the organism to reproduce and mature fast enough to keep up with the demand. So that means there will be less and less matured organism that can reproduce so a huge decrease in population resulting in high demand and less supply.
For everyone joking about the “years it takes to master” if you’ve ever been to Japan and eaten their food, you’d actually understand and taste the difference. Not to be a Debby downer. But honestly, I love the care and time. It’s an experience
For real tho. Even the conbini sandwiches are ten times better than any sandwich you can get in the states outside of maybe a specialty deli or a sit down restraunt. If you go in a convient store here for a sandwich it will be some turkey and cheese slapped on a week old sub roll that is somehow dry and soggy at the same time.
Making toast takes years to master. 3 years to get the right setting 8 years to spread the butter A lifetime to understand the right temperature at which you should even start spreading the butter
@@AMoose454 what an ignorant statement. Don't just lump together all western cuisine into one, Mediterranean cuisine is vastly different from Scandinavian
A lot of people talking about overfishing but the use of pesticides is probably the biggest issue here. Since Japan started spraying their fields with neonicotinoids, killing all of the eels food, their eel fisheries have completely collapsed. Pesticides are indiscriminately wiping out the bottom of the food chain, leading to ecological collapses like this.
mind linking to some evidence? seems pretty straightforward to me that overfishing would me much more responsible for population decline than pesticides. I'm open to the contrary evidence though
@@Stumashedpotatoes sorry, nothing to hand. I just finished reading Silent Earth by Dave Goulson and he made a very compelling argument about the link between pesticides and Japanese fisheries collapsing. I'd def recommend it if you're into that sort of thing.
@@DeLunny having read many journel articles, pesticides is a factor but not the major catalyst. Heck even some fish in china have become resistand to herbicides and pesticides in the rice fields. It's simply overfishing, as population grows, demands become bigger, thus over consumption. Bachs of enviro science here
Very sad that it’s clear they are removing young eels from the ocean therefore eliminating their possibility to breed, overfishing them to the point of being endangered, feeding them fish that contribute further to the general global problem of overfishing (not to mention plastic fishing gear in our oceans) and cost is the one single concern discussed here. I’d never pay more to eat any endangered species, no matter the time it takes to “master” grilling it…
Due to their international harvesting of glass eels/young eels the eel population in other countries are highly endangered. It's shameful that this video mentiones nothing of this.
@notamericano They are talking about japanese eel and chinese eel?, not mentioning the eel they catch elsewhere, e.g. near europe when they come from the sargasso sea. It's a hugh slaughter, the absence of eel already affecting the ecosystems.
@@flytwister5472 The title of the video is literally 'Japanese Eel'. It's not 'shameful' if they forgot to mention about the international status, different regions have different prices and conditions.
japans gdp since the late 80s adjusted for inflation and i mean real inflation not the consumer index price, has gone down meaning japan is producing less and less but to keep up with profitability they have to inflate everything
all these comments with saying "why does everything in japan take years to master" before the culture is focused on quality and perfection, its amazing the work they put in to even simple things and say all you want but i think its incredibly admirable they are willing to try and provide the best quality product
That's exactly what I'm saying. People are looking at this too literally. It doesn't take a lifetime to perfectly grill an Eel, maybe a couple of years, no more than 5. What the Japanese mean with this statement is that they're so devoted to their craft that they want nothing less than perfection for whatever product they're selling. It could be Knives, Electronics, Cars, Silverware, Chalk, etc. It's all done with quality in mind. They think long-term, not short-term. Compare Toyota and Chevy and it doesn't even come remotely close.
There's a point where the diminishing return is so low it's just not worth it to cut quantity for quality for most manufacturers. Yes there will always be a niche group that will pay up to perhaps hundreds of times for something that's only marginally better than the top shelf mass produced option depending upon difficulty, but it's never going to trump the money to be made on a broad customer base. And, it's a fragile system that can easily tank in a mild economical depression, lack of worthy apprentices when people retire or a number of other factors.
In Japan, experts won't teach skills to apprentices. Apprentices learn the skills of experts by observing during busy chores. Apprentices rarely have the opportunity to practice the skills they have learned. Therefore, it takes years to master.
apparently you don’t know how the japanese minds work. even the masters say they are still learning. japanese has perfectionist culture. they better things continuously. you are chinese i reckons?
I feel like I remember reading that eels only breed in the last year of their lives while they swim from a specific part of the ocean, so it makes sense that they've never witnessed breeding in captivity if there are requirements like that, especially if they're eaten before that time.
IKR? It would be like raising salmon in a tank then wondering why it doesn't spawn. They need to figure out how to collect the gonads and artificially inseminate while the government subsidizes for a couple years so the natural populations can refresh themselves. Imports only for a year or so with an insane price hike, I'm sure the Japanese people would understand it is for research and to protect future generations of eel.
@@Undomaranelit doesnt help that many only develop gonads at the end of their life cycle, but with hormone injections and some funding it should be fine
@@Hmm.223problem would be acquiring the funds for eel farms to do this on a large scale. But it should be possible especially if we can engineer bacteria to produce these hormones
I hate the fact that they know breeding eels is difficult and yet they admit they are over harvesting them. They know ‘something’ needs to be done yet they continue to decimate the species. Man really sucks - we ruin everything...
This is exactly also happened to the blue fin tuna, keep dcreasing each year and they know its indanger spesies but still, there’s a demand to fill their stomach
@@kimkardashianssalad920 I can’t control the world but I can do my little part by not purchasing this product. Meanwhile I have trouble convincing my relatives to not use straws or single-use plastics. Products made of ivory or tiger’s penis is an easier ‘sell’ but the whole thing is very exhausting. It’s really sad to see how we treat the earth and it’s resources. 🥲
@@kkoup35 its very good that you have this mindset and doings, but compared to about billions of humans in this world, im afraid it won't do too much, some stubborn people would always find ways to fill they're selfish needs sigh, what has this world come by
@@leejang2311 it’s true. They have the best toilets in the entire world where you don’t have to use your hand to wipe your left over fecal matter. I wonder how many more years it will take for the rest of the world to catch up to Japanese toilets.
This is a bit misleading. The fry (baby fish) are extremely costly per kilogram because they represent so many individual fish (upwards of 5,000) that will weigh many kgs once fully grown, but it still a very costly fish.
Actually its because its been impossible to commercialize eel breeding; scientists haven't figured out how to make them breed in captivity. Most eels are migratory and their spawning grounds are secretive enough that nobody has seen young eels hatch, making it a super limited resource since all farmed eels are effectively limited by "wild eel hatcheries"
So.... My friend's dad does all kinds of major surgeries including open heart and he isn't even 55. But it takes a lifetime to grill an eel? O_O Interesting.
There is a difference in mastering something and knowing what to do about something. When you master a thing you can never get it wrong in any condition but when you know how to do something it can go wrong if the conditions to do it change
He's talking about going beyond the 'acceptable' level,yes your friends dad can get the job done,but the guy in the video is talking about going beyond that,improving and improving beyond the acceptable level,got it?
@ash ketchum poke mastér well yes I agree,somethings in the video might be a bit exaggerated for marketing and all,but I believe that you can keep on improving on a certain thing,there's no level cap on a skill,you think you're an expert at something,and then someone comes along who does it better than you
Actually most meals are rather cheap. For some people cooking at home is barely worth it because of that normally being a hobby, to impress/feed a loved one and or family which a big deal as well, or because the preficture doesn't have a meal that another specializes in. It's just namely a few things that are as expensive as they are due to time, mastery, and craftsmanship being in the blood of the Japanese people.
Greatest marketing on the planet. Sushi, the glorification of becoming a sushi chef, wagyu beef, eel, etc. you name it. They know how to make the absolute most out of their limited resources.
The economic progress must be MAINTAINED at ALL COSTS, overfishing? climate change? destruction of biodiversity? nothing matters, we must leech Earth of everything until it's a hot oven like Venus. /s
A Lot of those baby glass eels are illegally harvested from rivers and streams on the East coast of the US, then shipped to Japan to grow in those farms.
I think when the Japanese say "it takes years to master" they mean having learned all the knowledge involved in a subject and reaching a state of nearly total control it sounds a little overkill when you're talk about grilling fish, but, the nuances of any skill are endless, and while they might not matter to 99 percent of people, they are still real. and they make a significant difference for those who care.
simply no. japan = scam. Sword smith master: You must wait until the sword is the color of the rising sun. Then take it out of the furnace and quench it in the water. Master Archer: Even if you hit the target, but your mind is not clear, NO POINTS. Master Kendo: Even if you hit the target, but forgot to scream, NO POINTS. Master candle maker: I make these by hands, so its a craft. Therefore, I need to scam people on the price. Scammer Chef: The best fried rice is just plain eggs and rice. Because it is the original. Master samurai: if you're about to attack me, you must scream so that I know you're coming. scam scam scam. over exaggerate everything. edit: the newest japanese scam trend is to cook mediocre food in large portions to have that "wow" factor. But in reality its to upcharge customers.
Those wondering why everything in Japan took years to master, must have never mastered a skill. Everything in life take years to "Master", this is not just to be sufficient or mediocre. Take music for example. It only take months to jam out melody from an instrument, a year to be proficient, and a life time to be a virtuoso. As why it seems to be a Japan specific phenomena, it has something to do with the philosophy of Ikigai, which, transliterated means "Worth of Life". Although, despite it's heavy connotation, doesn''t have to be something grandiose like changing the world or cure cancer, rather, it should define an activity or service which could bring joy and fulfillment to each individual. Tieing with that concept, it is not hard to see you'll dig deeper into any specific activity that brings fulfillment and discover new things along with devotion to its mastery.
Let's be honest though, a large part of why they say this is to justify the sky high prices of the fish. You won't be that much better at such a mundane task years later, the skill ceiling simply isn't that high with these mundane tasks. You might be able to get a bit faster, but at some point you've found a proper way to do most of these tasks that gives consistent results, and regardless of how much time you put in, it will never get noticeably better. That said, it is nice for people who do these mundane jobs that they get to feel more important/masterful than they would in a country that appreciates these jobs less.
The reason why the comments r like, "everything in jpan takes years to master" cuz whenever they r covering topic like this but different country, they never say "takes years to master"
@@osteogenesisdev5268 Boiled down to it's essence, everything starts from mundane tasks. We used to just simply hunt, and now there's hunting expert. We used to just simply burn food on fire, and now there's chefs. We used to bang on rocks, and now there's professional musicians. The difference here is scale. Thinking there's only fixed amount of things that could be "mastered" will make everything seems mundane. Hell, even drinking wine could be a professional career choice.
I love Unagi. Just found out it's on the endangered list. I will not eat anymore and spread the word. I was a big Unagi consumer. One of my favorite dishes. It's amazing how easy it is to say goodbye to consuming this endangered species. Maybe if we all do out part, one day these tasty morsels can thrive again and we can eat them again. I respect this creature that has tasted so good and has nourished me throughout my life. I hope it makes a come back. Thanks social media for informing me. I'll pay it forward and due my due diligence to not be a part of the problem of making an animal go extinct. American's consume 90% of the eel population. I believe in Americans to ultimately do the right thing. We are a leading nation and should set the bar on how to act responsible. God bless America and the eels we used to eat.
Basically it is only for the investigation nowadays, not for fun nor eat. No japanese eats whales in these days. I only have one time experience in the decades of my life. And many japanese has never eaten it. It is very often used for some propaganda to mind wash people like you. Also, check Denmark whales and whales kill event, grindarap. Their tradition is continued for every year fun. If the cruelty to mammals is the matter, we really need to be a vegetarian. If the intelligence of the eaten animal is matter, neither octopus should not be consumed.
@@drepen5946 Dane here. Faroe Islands, not Denmark hunt grinde/pilot whale. They have permission to hunt the whales, Japan doesn't have one, eventhought the catch sharks. The hunters on Faroe Islands are trained in hunting humane. They eat the meat, the fat is toxic because of polution. The have qouta for how many they are allowed to hunt. If you don't know the real facts, then don' t spew Lies. Just don't air your opinion. Your opinion is not facts!
Here in Maine they call baby eels Elvers. They sell for about $1,200 or more a pound to the buyers, then they get shipped over to Japan and other places. Only a certain amount of permits are allowed. Some permits stay in the family for generations.
Ever since I was born it took me 45 years to learn how to learn a Japanese skill since were in Asia’s my parents put me through numerous tests to see what I learned when I cooked I was blindfolded with no arm and I couldn’t use my thumbs either
Very disrespectful. You can really taste a difference when it comes the way your food is made. Mastery in a specialty is part of their culture and i really respect that. But you prob. never really eat at such high quality dining places?
ah yes, just like "You are just Drawing" or just "You are just chopping wood", but you need to know, even if its simple, you have to mastery the Technique and it cost a lot of time
I’m annoyed how they didn’t mention that European and American eels are constantly used too, and imported to Japan. The European eel is now a critically endangered species, and the American eel is endangered.
@@isuckatpickingnames3488 no you did not like i said 3 words in google and you could find your answer but you would rather make yourself look like a fool
@@missplainjane3905 as a guy that lives on earth, where japan is. i will answer all your questions 1) even though japan is high developed, they still use outdated as shit stuff 2) 9 out of 10 3) really good country
natural eels have very difficult cycle of life, a lot of species who rely on lake/river/sea cycle have been quite extinct due to human overfishing or settlement or pollution, in addition some species have long life cycle and wont come backj easily, some species need to have a memory of the place for resettle again, if its extinct in some place and are protected, they cant come back for decade... by example!: the cod, extinct by overfishing in the 1990 its only 30years later they come back to terre-neuve. but fishing is the oldest way of thinking for people, even quotas and protection are never respected, this is what is going on all around the world ->overfishing->extinction all drive by price market->only most tasty food is risen...future is also very bad, more fossile fuel->co2 in air->co2 in sea->acidifcation->less plancton->less oxygen->less fish.
Wow, signing up for a 100-year course on grilling eel sounds like an incredible commitment to mastering such a traditional skill! Your excitement to become a grill eel master is inspiring.
A huge part of the story that wasn't discussed here: Japan has been buying wild baby eels from China for the cheap and selling them back at a huge profit for years. After China also exhausted a few rivers, they figured out how to breed baby eels at scale (IT TOOK YEARS TO MASTER!!). while Japan still couldn't. Now all Japanese eels you will ever eat come from China, even the "locally produced" ones.
Fr I hate these comments taking digs at what they're passionate about. Just taking apart an eel is already difficult enough from what I've seen on a channel called Kimagure cook. They are constantly striving to be better while these guys in the comments are..
I'm keeping one of these as a pet currently, didn't know they were pricey. Bought mine from a local fish store for 3$ ( converted from my local currency ). I feed him bloodworms
At the end of the day, it is all business. Unless theres an outside organization that checks the actual harvest of the young eels, the farmer gets to dictate the price you pay.
I am a Japanese and I would like to ask those who laugh at the saying that it takes a lifetime to master the cooking of eel this question: Can you claim to have mastered even one thing in your life? In Japan, there are many traditional crafts, and artisans spend a lifetime honing their skills. Examples include Japanese swords, sushi, and kimonos."
Eels are special. European eel for example only reproduce in one location on the entire earth, the sargasso sea. They migrate back and forth across the entire world. That's one of the reason why they're in danger of extinction. Many eels die because of turbines in dams etc.
Learning to fish outside japan: 1 month
Learning to fish inside japan : 2 lifetimes take it or leave it
fun fact japan import for 15billion of $ of sea food each year, and 90%of their own catch are eaten by them, half of fish they eat is bought to foreign fishermen...most of them are chinese which ffish fleet rule the pacific. since its a wealthy country they can afford high valuable sea food like tuna, crab, lobster, shrimp, salmon which they bought from all over the world...they are the 3rd fish market in $ despite be a 120million people country....so what you see is that japan concentrate on rising valuable fish, and buy world other valuable sea food....in opposition poor countries/sailor eat the less valuable catch, and sell expensive species to big market like usa/japan/china.
I know
It a joke based on the video
The reason why everything is so perfect in Japan
@@anitachandra2030 I wouldn’t say perfect
They just exaggerate over there
Everything in Japan:
“Years to master”
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Ha haa
Well they better hurry up and master the art of breeding eel. They know how to artificially inseminated trout.💖🌞🌵😷
evrything in usa 5 min to master
@@speakupyt4900, so are bananas. Bananas are slightly radio active. 💖🌞🌵😷
ANY THING JAPANESE : "Preparing it takes years to master "
Yeah that's why I rarely see Japanese people in the RUclips comment section. I once came across a master that spend the last 15 years on honing his skills on writing the perfect RUclips comments. I felt deeply honored by witnessing his dedication 🙏
@TheExplorer that does attract tourists. However, you can’t call years of training crap that is made up JUST to attract people.
I’m going to ADRIAN’S KICKBACK tonight 😂💯 hope y’all tune in to the video
"Seaspiracy"
Eel is definitely difficult to filet, because its so fkin slimy but to say it would take years is bs. Id say it takes a week if you do it every day all day long.
“Grilling takes your whole life to master”
Guy working at grill is 27.
Then he has a ways to go, eh?
He started at 4 years of age.
@@pacoramon9468 He had started it whilst in the womb.
So he's still apparently not doing it correctly
Didn't you know he's a master from land of no land in sumrai era
Total master shogun today lool utter bulshit
Japanese wouldn't be japanese if there is no ""it takes a few years to master"
Because it’s b.s
@@briom1425 but most things do take a few years to master? Not too far fetched
@@faitodeyo7019 Yeah but a lifetime to master grilling them? Lets be serious. They probably say that to keep the price really high. "Oh too hard to learn how to cook, so must charge high price"
@@joshlete that makes more sense then thx
@@joshlete you should try to compare the higher and lower price eel in Japan someday. I can't explain it but you'll notice differences.
I'm japanese and I've taken years of practice just to write this one comment.
Lol
😂😂😂
Arigato
@@xraydog2011 Gozaimasu
🤣🤣🤣
Every time an animal or plant is on “So Expensive”
“Iemme guess, overfished/harvested”
congrats bro you have unlocked common sense
Haha, they just don't want to understand that they are overfishing and overuse. Profits above all. The hell if they ho extinct. LOVE NATURE RESPECT NATURE ❤
Or just hard to find.
what a surprise
@@poalchihan well it's hard tl find when you hunt the shit out of it. Then when it's hard to find typically it's because you overfished it.
I mean….I think it’s kind of explanatory. This is an unsustainable industry, you can’t just expect to catch all the young eels and expect their native populations to sustain themselves,
I've heard there's been research being done to sustainably hatch and raise eels without resorting to outsourcing glass eels from the wild. I'm not entirely sure how far along the research is but here's to hoping for sustainability.
@@phestojen7966
Even with farmed stocks, which is still long ways off, I doubt it will be sufficient to meet demand. And there’s no guarantee that a sustainable option will be available before the complete depletion of natural wild stock.
fun fact: Chinese eels are 1/2 or 2/3 cheaper than Japanese eels. All eels are wild caught and farm raised. Lots of Japanese eels are actually imported from China and rebranded in Japan.
Thanos needs to be real.
Japanese greed is also perfect and takes years of practice to master it.
Japan: *Year's of practice and mastering*
while in my country: hires part-timers
Hey I see you everywhere
If you actually lived in Japan, you'd know that most of this work is also done by part-timers. This whole "it takes a lifetime to master" shit is just BS they like to say to gin up tourism.
Hey you are here to
Your comment make no sense like tf part time exist in Japan to
Its same here in japan. The video is exaggerating alot
Breathing In Japan: “it’s takes life to master”
Tanjiro: say it again
true
you cannot master breathing without life
Both of you are here? Ok my life is complete
Ok jealous american boy with no skills lol
😂😂😂
“Drinking water”- takes years to master
Didn’t max out my skill level till last October
Also it cost 100,000 thousands dollars
Yeah, they like to be over the top with everything. Even the most mundane tasks. 😅
lol
@@MosesMatsepane but they do it better than you
So they never ACTUALLY said that the problem is that they are taking all the baby eels from the wild because they haven’t figured out how to breed them in captivity, and so every year there are less and less eels to catch because there aren’t enough left to breed new babies. Way to go human greed 🙄
exactly it's so stupid if they released even a quarter of the full grown eel's they might not have to declining numbers and the risk of so much lost income to
That's the point. Less eel + High demand = Profit
I mean... if we look as to why they couldn’t breed eels in captivity as efficiently as farm factories, it would make sense
Since THERES STILL NO ANSWER AS TO HOW EELS REPRODUCT
So what are they gonna do? Stop catching them? They said it's a big part the economy, so a lot of restaurants would go out of business and the economy could take a huge hit from it. It's easy enough to say what you said, but actually doing it is way harder. The video also said that there currently *is* effort being made to improve the situation, but it isn't enough apparently. You also say getting rid of a fourth of their eels is a good idea, but if you recall, restaurants are still dependent on a high enough quantity of eel. On top of that, prices would skyrocket higher than they already are, and people would stop buying as much. I'm sure you can see the economical cost that would come from that.
At this point it isn't about greed, but about people's livelihoods.
Also to the person who mentioned eel reproduction, not sure what you want to know specifically about it? I can tell you a few things, unless you are referring to the fact that we can't figure out the exact process, physiologically.
If Im not mistaken, the reproduction of eels is actually a mystery we have yet to solve. It’s been like that for hundreds of years. If Im not mistaken, European eels only apear in regular siting areas as adults without sex organs. They go upstream and enter and entirely different life stage, and mate somewhere out at sea where we still haven’t found. If japanese eels are similar than this isn’t easy. The reason they’re catching babies isn’t just because they’re idiots Its because we don’t know how to breed them. And of corse if a farmer has put in the work and money to raise them, generally they’re going sell what they’ve spent money on to buy and raise to be eaten. Don’t act like there’s an easy way out because there’s not.
It’s even possible that captive-raised eels are missing something they would have gotten in the wild, something that would have made them unable to breed regardless if they were released (Im thinking this possibility is about 35% likley but Im just guessing)
"How to blend coffee"
Japan: It takes a century to master coffee blending using spoon and cup.
Then boom world most expensive coffee form japan 🗿
@@anon-le9fp *from 🗿
Thats what they say to get everyone to pay top $$$
Look up the tea ceremony.
Sojiro Sakura would like to know your address...
They should start a new series, “ how many years does it take to master” (Japan special)
Answer for every episodes .. "Many years"
JAPAN is all about quality and perfection not like shit India
@@amarbinay6654 haha cringe weaboo kid spotted
@Arvind. the truth is all I am saying
@@kshitijnigam640 even if I ain't weebos India looks so shitty in comparison to JAPAN
I just signed up for a course (how to properly grill an eel) in Japan and the length of this course is 100 years. I am super excited to be a grill eel master.
🤣🤣🤣👍
Don't bother. It will take years to master
🤣😂🤣✨it takes 10 years before you get to even see a live eel but good luck with your eel course
That’s just the starting course, to become Samurai proficiency you have to spend another 1000 years just to get the master certification
damn really?? I signed up for a class that takes 2 lifetimes to become a grill eel master
All Jokes aside about the "years to master thing" the part about slicing eel he ain't joking about. Having worked as a fish monger in the past for about 2 years I can tell you properly butchering (slicing) the eel is seriously one of the hardest things to do. It's super slippery, you can damage the good meat if you aren't careful. Since freshness is key (live killing just before using as food) doing it fast and in a way that keeps the good meat in tact is definitely hard. Now the 9 years part? idk about all that but it definitely takes "years to master"
Thanks for the insight!
@Jared D No, that's a way to describe the Japanese method for preparing seafood of the highest freshest quality. By "preparing live" refers to killing the fish instantly and right after beginning the butchery process.
haha. I fish when I was younger. When we see eel that is rare, we can't even catch it. It's slippery slope as they say. It's like all the lubes in the world put on this slimy thing.
@Jared D Nah, that's China. They cook them alive. Japan I think kill them and serve them fresh I think. Like sushi.
Yes.. I'm so fed up with those dumb comments mocking artisan. They are sloppy workers who think they have mastered something when they does shitty job.
3 years to master the skewering, 8 years for the slicing. He forgot the 5 years required to master the pepper grinding!
And 4 years to give to the customer
Don't forget 2 years to remembering all that
Amount of eel caught is a matter of life or death for eel restaurant. We have been open for 150 years
I hope its just embellishing, whats the point of having national dishes that can only be made in a few restaurants?
lmao 5zero you got a funny ass personality
Japanese Walmart employee: it takes 5 years to master stocking shampoo shelves. 10 for soap. Baby diapers the rest of your life .
So funny. Yeah why does it have to take a whole life to do anything in Japan. Even the bonsai trees takes decades to master
@@turklerbilsin676 I think they have lot of time🔥🔥
Perfection is what they strive.
Cause old workers they do not want to lose their job. So 5 years washing rice
Japan has never had a school shooting, let’s just say that.
No wonder young people in Japan depressed. Everything "takes years to master".
Imagine “takeshi take 30 years to master cooking instant noodle”
@@Shigeshajo it’s a art okay
everything takes years to master
Seems like you only like to lay under the apple tree and hope for the fruit to fall in your mouth
Or a lifetime
Japanese are so dedicated to their culture and craft. Wish they had the same passion for their Eco System and preventing over fishing
literally many countries are like that too.
@@redwarriorXYTRUclips Japan is especially difficult in that case. They overfish and eat everything. Not to shame them, but their culture honestly makes maintaining some species alive a very difficult task
@@redwarriorXYTRUclips the comment and video is about japan. dont act like they said other countries don’t do this too.
@@sofadudeman what do you mean don’t act like what? tf Just because it about Japanese eel doesn’t mean it has anything to do with eco system and preventing fishing when the problem isn’t just japan, literally many other countries done the same and why don’t you guys solve it then just complain and shit, idc about the problems but blaming a country because they didn’t do it when their own countries and doing the samething is just bullshit.
@@redwarriorXYTRUclips ????? bro…. the commenter did NOT insult japan, they just said they wished japan had the same passion for preventing over-fishing.
there was no blaming. don’t try to bring other countries to defend japan. It’s just a misunderstanding, we don’t have to argue over it.
Japanese have really figured out job security. Like what ya gonna do fire me and wait a whole life time to get another eel grill master...lol
Good one mate.
He wouldn't get fired though, because he wouldn't become a master without extreme dedication to his craft.
Yeah they have really found a good shortcut, just dedicate years of their life to their craft
Why Japanese Eel Is So Expensive? 👎👎Because it's all radioactive Eels !!!! LMAO
Greenpeace just tested all Japanese fishes, there were high level of Cesium was detected in fishes and
produces from Japan and many countries banned Japanese products for these reasons!
@@speakupyt4900 Greenpeace has been proven to be full with incompetent idiots and terrorists tho so cba
Japanese people really knows how to market their product where the price could be triple or quadruple than your average, for example Square watermelons, white strawberry ,eels and etc..
Americans are about quanity, XXXL pizza with 6 types of cheese and cheese stuffed crust on a bed of cheese. Comes with 2 gallons of neon colored sugar water and a garbage bag of fries
@@genderfluidsneutral4591 we also like High ABV in our beer.. But My Filipina Wife likes that too .. My wife lived in Tokyo and said everything was too expensive and not worth the money... She also lived in Dubai and had the same complaint.. Now she is with me in Texas and has more food and Beer than she knows what to do with... Yep we super size everything and always at half price....
@@greenfungus1 I bet she prefers to eat at home, and eats lots of rice. I'm asian as well and I can eat pizza, burgers etc. But I need rice at least once a day usually for dinner.
@@genderfluidsneutral4591 Yep lots of rice... Breakfast time with Eggs, Later with pork or chicken oh and lot's of fish and seafood too... We had Chicken Paws and rice just now..
@@genderfluidsneutral4591 Everything that you just said sounds delicious.
The way the eels are eating that paste is pretty satisfying
It's cute
Seaspi>racy!
idk it sort of creeped me out
@@toxicjay8562 yes.. sadly they're gonna get eaten
@@nasuegaming1255 at least they would have at least they lived happily but their buddies so they do
When Japanese people say “it takes years to master”, what it really means is that you will never reach “perfection” but you work towards it. Dont be satisfied and stop working on your passion. Be humble and keep on improving. Its just a Japanese cultural mindset when it comes to craftsmanship. A Japanese craftsman or an artist could work on something for most of their lifetime and he will NEVER claim that he has “mastered” it. It could be the lack of translation in these videos but I wanted to point that out.
This obsession with "mastering" every skill and over-emphasis on taking "years to master", has kept many Japanese employees from fitting in well in US corporations. Most American companies have an emphasis more on production rather than quality. They tend to have a "the perfect is the enemy of the good" philosophy. Can't tell you how many bosses I've had who've pulled me aside and basically said "Just get 'er done", when they perceived I was focused too much on getting something perfect.
I feel like they make everything into this hyper perfect art-level goods that it sucks the joy out of trying anything new. Since everything needs to be so perfect, there no reason for people to explore things for leisurely interests. Although the perfection mindset gives stellar products, at the end of the day no perfect product will bring you joy.
@Billy Webster I wonder if the people eating it would realise the difference if a novice made it😂
@@leatherxrose7743 the pursuit of perfection in itself can bring joy.
@@echizennishida9554 I definitely agree....but Japan is known for its suicide rates and work-to-the-bone culture now....I don't feel like they are finding much joy. (Just my opinion, not to offend anyone)
@@leatherxrose7743 while there is truth in the matter, let's avoid making sweeping statements about an entire race. Cheers.
The reason for a lot of seafood becoming expensive is overfishing: lobsters, oysters, tuna, eel, scallops etc.
True
Wait I’m confused. Doesn’t overfishing mean more supply so that should make it less expensive?
@@davve5657the demand and amount caught is too much, leaving behind less and less for the next time they go fishing again causing the price to rise
@@davve5657 less fish make it to breeding season, causing lower population. Less are caught annually
@@davve5657 overfishing mean in theory there is more fish how ever you are not allowing the organism to reproduce and mature fast enough to keep up with the demand. So that means there will be less and less matured organism that can reproduce so a huge decrease in population resulting in high demand and less supply.
YOU guys should make episode on " Why every thing in Japan take years to master"
It would take years to master making that video though.
@@kuokublaikhan 😂😂😂😂👍👍
@@kuokublaikhan 😂😂😂
oh you used the same joke format as half the other commenters. truly hilarious
great things take time
It takes young Japanese apprentices 3 years to learn to squat, 10 for taking a dump, and a lifetime to master wiping.
A foolish man will say: "How many wipes before my anus is clean?" But a wise man will say: "How many anuses until I am The Wipe?" ✨️🙏
i like how this video instantly appears into everyone's recommendations instead of waiting several years
yeah but this will probably be a recommendations 10 years later
🤣🤣🤣🤣
The recommendations is getting better and faster than before. As you know, it take years to master.
18 year old boy at job interview
Master: You need 15 years of experience for this job.
18 year old : "Fine then...Keep your job vacancy."
I love kids
18 year old: I have been training for this job since I was 3
Normally if it's a restaurant passed by tradition they take the boy as apprentice
@@seansweno7127 ayo?
For everyone joking about the “years it takes to master” if you’ve ever been to Japan and eaten their food, you’d actually understand and taste the difference. Not to be a Debby downer. But honestly, I love the care and time. It’s an experience
For real tho. Even the conbini sandwiches are ten times better than any sandwich you can get in the states outside of maybe a specialty deli or a sit down restraunt. If you go in a convient store here for a sandwich it will be some turkey and cheese slapped on a week old sub roll that is somehow dry and soggy at the same time.
I think every culture has cuisine that takes many years to master, japan is not special in this department
Making toast takes years to master.
3 years to get the right setting
8 years to spread the butter
A lifetime to understand the right temperature at which you should even start spreading the butter
That’s essentially most eastern countries. The west is based on fast food and cancer, the east actually eats natural food and exercise.
@@AMoose454 what an ignorant statement. Don't just lump together all western cuisine into one, Mediterranean cuisine is vastly different from Scandinavian
A lot of people talking about overfishing but the use of pesticides is probably the biggest issue here. Since Japan started spraying their fields with neonicotinoids, killing all of the eels food, their eel fisheries have completely collapsed.
Pesticides are indiscriminately wiping out the bottom of the food chain, leading to ecological collapses like this.
Touché, well said.
mind linking to some evidence? seems pretty straightforward to me that overfishing would me much more responsible for population decline than pesticides. I'm open to the contrary evidence though
@@Stumashedpotatoes sorry, nothing to hand. I just finished reading Silent Earth by Dave Goulson and he made a very compelling argument about the link between pesticides and Japanese fisheries collapsing. I'd def recommend it if you're into that sort of thing.
Neonicotinoids are awful
@@DeLunny having read many journel articles, pesticides is a factor but not the major catalyst. Heck even some fish in china have become resistand to herbicides and pesticides in the rice fields. It's simply overfishing, as population grows, demands become bigger, thus over consumption. Bachs of enviro science here
it looks like they are eating peanut butter
Here before it blows up...
Never gonna give you up
Leaving my signature here
it was shit
It looks like dough to me
Very sad that it’s clear they are removing young eels from the ocean therefore eliminating their possibility to breed, overfishing them to the point of being endangered, feeding them fish that contribute further to the general global problem of overfishing (not to mention plastic fishing gear in our oceans) and cost is the one single concern discussed here. I’d never pay more to eat any endangered species, no matter the time it takes to “master” grilling it…
Exactly.
They should only take old infertile eels from the ocean, and leave the rest
The oceans are already at their breaking point with overfishing.
And no has problem with this. 😔
They’re farm raising like 99% of the eels, not catching them. Did you watch the whole video?
@@rhs010 farm raising following catching wild babies as breeding programs have been unsuccessful
If you have eaten eel skewer in Japan, you may notice that the finish sauce they put on the skewer is freaking addictive
S e a s p i r a c y
@@insectbite1714 man stfu i k its a problem but u spaming it is a problem too
Well said , stfu
@Ronald David It's pretty similar in taste to teriyaki
And if you have eaten eel dish in London, you may notice how clueless the brits in cooking is.
I won't lie, seeing these eel on the grill made me really hungry, which was immediately negated by seeing them alive
Due to their international harvesting of glass eels/young eels the eel population in other countries are highly endangered. It's shameful that this video mentiones nothing of this.
Agreed
5:37?
Bruh, did u even watch the vid
@notamericano They are talking about japanese eel and chinese eel?, not mentioning the eel they catch elsewhere, e.g. near europe when they come from the sargasso sea. It's a hugh slaughter, the absence of eel already affecting the ecosystems.
@@flytwister5472 The title of the video is literally 'Japanese Eel'. It's not 'shameful' if they forgot to mention about the international status, different regions have different prices and conditions.
I guess Ryo Kurokiba wasn't bluffing when he said: 'Three years for skewering. Eight for slicing. A lifetime for the grill'
I knew I heard this before, but I couldn't figure out from where. Was literally bugging me the whole day...
Yow. Shokugeki no soma
Food wars lol
It's a popular saying and I think I've also heard it from Chris from Abroad in Japan
@@therealbigfloppa5512 so expensive video about Japanese chef knives. I heard it there.
Next Episode :
"Why everything in japan is Expensive now?"
japans gdp since the late 80s adjusted for inflation and i mean real inflation not the consumer index price, has gone down meaning japan is producing less and less but to keep up with profitability they have to inflate everything
not necessarily.
there are expensive one and also cheaper one.
you can get it around $6 at yoshinoya(japanese fast food ).
Figurine is so expensive nowadays
The episode after that -> "Why is Japan expensive now?"
@@jaytang4954 and the Japanese population is kind of old which is really putting them on edge with their working class
all these comments with saying "why does everything in japan take years to master" before the culture is focused on quality and perfection, its amazing the work they put in to even simple things and say all you want but i think its incredibly admirable they are willing to try and provide the best quality product
By destroying the environment and massacres a whole species ?
@@GilbyMinaj Like everyone else in the world did to something at some point. The impact of those things often happened before such awareness existed.
@@victorpresti people in this comment section is so ignorant
That's exactly what I'm saying. People are looking at this too literally. It doesn't take a lifetime to perfectly grill an Eel, maybe a couple of years, no more than 5. What the Japanese mean with this statement is that they're so devoted to their craft that they want nothing less than perfection for whatever product they're selling. It could be Knives, Electronics, Cars, Silverware, Chalk, etc. It's all done with quality in mind. They think long-term, not short-term. Compare Toyota and Chevy and it doesn't even come remotely close.
There's a point where the diminishing return is so low it's just not worth it to cut quantity for quality for most manufacturers. Yes there will always be a niche group that will pay up to perhaps hundreds of times for something that's only marginally better than the top shelf mass produced option depending upon difficulty, but it's never going to trump the money to be made on a broad customer base. And, it's a fragile system that can easily tank in a mild economical depression, lack of worthy apprentices when people retire or a number of other factors.
"Years to master"
Then hires a part time griller
Years to master... yeah if you’re stupid lol
@@radshi exactly how low ur iq cant understand to do thing same way like every time u do it
@@nirwanaeathell what language are you speaking? I put what you said on google translate and the webpage crashed
Bill Wang are you liking your own comment?
@@radshi which means that those unagis were not masterfully grilled..
how to use a spoon.
World : 3 years.
Japan : lifetime + some rolling in the grave
In Japan, experts won't teach skills to apprentices. Apprentices learn the skills of experts by observing during busy chores. Apprentices rarely have the opportunity to practice the skills they have learned.
Therefore, it takes years to master.
apparently you don’t know how the japanese minds work. even the masters say they are still learning.
japanese has perfectionist culture. they better things continuously. you are chinese i reckons?
@@fly89 another internet know-it-all pretending they know all about a certain culture and talking down to people
@@itsamememario545 presumably
@@fly89 このような行いや発言に対して「恥を知れ」という言葉がありますが、今となってはあまり聞かなくなってしまった言葉でもありますね
@@SimpleBald 確かに私の言っていることがすべてにあてはまるわけではありませんが、事実です。それに私は職人の技術を馬鹿にして乏しめているわけではありません。上記の内容は単に職人が部外者から産業を守るためにやっていることです。修業期間を設けることで技術のみを盗用したい人物を遠ざける意味があります。
「恥を知れ」なんて強い言葉を直接言わず、引き合いに出して濁すのはいかがなものでしょうか。あなたにその言葉をお返ししたく存じます。
I feel like I remember reading that eels only breed in the last year of their lives while they swim from a specific part of the ocean, so it makes sense that they've never witnessed breeding in captivity if there are requirements like that, especially if they're eaten before that time.
IKR? It would be like raising salmon in a tank then wondering why it doesn't spawn. They need to figure out how to collect the gonads and artificially inseminate while the government subsidizes for a couple years so the natural populations can refresh themselves. Imports only for a year or so with an insane price hike, I'm sure the Japanese people would understand it is for research and to protect future generations of eel.
@@Undomaranelit doesnt help that many only develop gonads at the end of their life cycle, but with hormone injections and some funding it should be fine
@@Hmm.223problem would be acquiring the funds for eel farms to do this on a large scale. But it should be possible especially if we can engineer bacteria to produce these hormones
I hate the fact that they know breeding eels is difficult and yet they admit they are over harvesting them. They know ‘something’ needs to be done yet they continue to decimate the species. Man really sucks - we ruin everything...
This is exactly also happened to the blue fin tuna, keep dcreasing each year and they know its indanger spesies but still, there’s a demand to fill their stomach
Man will decimate every species eventually!
And what are we going to do, stop them? 🤭
@@kimkardashianssalad920 I can’t control the world but I can do my little part by not purchasing this product. Meanwhile I have trouble convincing my relatives to not use straws or single-use plastics. Products made of ivory or tiger’s penis is an easier ‘sell’ but the whole thing is very exhausting. It’s really sad to see how we treat the earth and it’s resources. 🥲
@@kkoup35 its very good that you have this mindset and doings, but compared to about billions of humans in this world, im afraid it won't do too much, some stubborn people would always find ways to fill they're selfish needs sigh, what has this world come by
It takes 5 years for a Japanese RUclipsr to master their first comment.
HAHA
@@michaelkato8999 im impressed
Japanese: "I spent 30 years to master 'ass-wiping skill', so my ass is cleaner than most of you :)))))))"
@@leejang2311 lmao
@@leejang2311 it’s true. They have the best toilets in the entire world where you don’t have to use your hand to wipe your left over fecal matter.
I wonder how many more years it will take for the rest of the world to catch up to Japanese toilets.
"It's a mixture of fish meal..."
Eels: ngl that's tasty
The Japanese culture is just fascinating. They literally have so much passion and dedication for their craft.
Sure thing. They aren't able to breed them.
@@raychii7361 , you'd think so, but they can breed $1M koi. Why can't they breed eel? Sounds fishy to me! 💖🌞🌵😷
@@suzisaintjames I leaned sounds fishy to me in Japan’s English school! Thanks for teaching me gently!!
@@speakupyt4900 yay I get to be a superhero
In America we just wrap things in bacon and call it a day
This is a bit misleading. The fry (baby fish) are extremely costly per kilogram because they represent so many individual fish (upwards of 5,000) that will weigh many kgs once fully grown, but it still a very costly fish.
Actually its because its been impossible to commercialize eel breeding; scientists haven't figured out how to make them breed in captivity. Most eels are migratory and their spawning grounds are secretive enough that nobody has seen young eels hatch, making it a super limited resource since all farmed eels are effectively limited by "wild eel hatcheries"
Yeah I wish that was pointed out.
@@bttnat439 and you are from ?
@@bttnat439 where are you from buddy
@@icy239 LOL why are you guys are so curious to know where I from?
It seems to me that the Japanese are really great at marketing themselves by always superimposing words like "it takes a lifetime to learn" etc.
Apne yha toh Kam hone se hua ...adha adhura Woh b😂
Sahi kaha ....they take years to even have intercourse .....saale har cheez ko art bana dete hai.....
At least India ke tara tho half cold half hot nahin he
Yes India is leading top one,at covid cases
Indians, on the other hand, have been mastered a dozen times because they never mastered war.
So why is it expensive?
Japan:" well we fcked the ecosystem that's why"
Im planing since years to visit Japan. Now I know why it takes me so long. It takes years to master to book my trip.
More like a lifetime. Good luck.
😂✌Good one!
So.... My friend's dad does all kinds of major surgeries including open heart and he isn't even 55. But it takes a lifetime to grill an eel? O_O Interesting.
I believe your friend's dad is good at what he does, but is he a master at it? There is a difference.
There is a difference in mastering something and knowing what to do about something. When you master a thing you can never get it wrong in any condition but when you know how to do something it can go wrong if the conditions to do it change
@ash ketchum poke mastér Nice 😃
He's talking about going beyond the 'acceptable' level,yes your friends dad can get the job done,but the guy in the video is talking about going beyond that,improving and improving beyond the acceptable level,got it?
@ash ketchum poke mastér well yes I agree,somethings in the video might be a bit exaggerated for marketing and all,but I believe that you can keep on improving on a certain thing,there's no level cap on a skill,you think you're an expert at something,and then someone comes along who does it better than you
Damn, is there a thing that can be learned in a couple of hours and does not require years to master in Japan?
Making lasagna
@@morvid1968 lasagna are not even japanese man
@@atapuma5756 Deez nuts
I’m confused.
@@morvid1968 reading this back and forth was like watching god playing chess with himself
Japan: “Years to master”
Philippines: "Days to master"
Up next:
WHY EVERYTHING JAPANESE IS SO EXPENSIVE? | SO EXPENSIVE
Why is EVERYTHING IS EXPENSIVE
WatchSeapiracy on TV
Actually most meals are rather cheap. For some people cooking at home is barely worth it because of that normally being a hobby, to impress/feed a loved one and or family which a big deal as well, or because the preficture doesn't have a meal that another specializes in. It's just namely a few things that are as expensive as they are due to time, mastery, and craftsmanship being in the blood of the Japanese people.
Greatest marketing on the planet. Sushi, the glorification of becoming a sushi chef, wagyu beef, eel, etc. you name it. They know how to make the absolute most out of their limited resources.
@@insectbite1714 still not giving up seafood
Yet people argue that the overfishing argument is exaggerated...
Those people are ignorant.
There’s reasons why Govnement around the globe put sanctions on fishing.
Watch Seaspiracy. Our modern day fishing demands are just too high. The effects of overfishing are upsetting.
The economic progress must be MAINTAINED at ALL COSTS, overfishing? climate change? destruction of biodiversity? nothing matters, we must leech Earth of everything until it's a hot oven like Venus. /s
@@AmongUs-mb4qx humans extinction will not be the result of nature but by human actions.
@@insectbite1714 over-
A Lot of those baby glass eels are illegally harvested from rivers and streams on the East coast of the US, then shipped to Japan to grow in those farms.
Lol im sure it's legal but yup .. up in Maine
I saw a documentary about this. Those eel fishermen are making some serious money sending eels to Japan.
@@ballistic350 it's illegal
They're invasive pests
@@AzmiMaulanaHamdani fishing for Elver eels is legal in both Maine and South Carolina
Breathing correctly in Japan: takes years to master.
Grilling eels takes a lifetime... I believe the young eel chefs are not going to live long.
I think when the Japanese say "it takes years to master" they mean having learned all the knowledge involved in a subject and reaching a state of nearly total control
it sounds a little overkill when you're talk about grilling fish, but, the nuances of any skill are endless, and while they might not matter to 99 percent of people, they are still real. and they make a significant difference for those who care.
عربي هين يا هلاااا
@@ax7e هلا بك
simply no. japan = scam.
Sword smith master: You must wait until the sword is the color of the rising sun. Then take it out of the furnace and quench it in the water.
Master Archer: Even if you hit the target, but your mind is not clear, NO POINTS.
Master Kendo: Even if you hit the target, but forgot to scream, NO POINTS.
Master candle maker: I make these by hands, so its a craft. Therefore, I need to scam people on the price.
Scammer Chef: The best fried rice is just plain eggs and rice. Because it is the original.
Master samurai: if you're about to attack me, you must scream so that I know you're coming.
scam scam scam. over exaggerate everything.
edit: the newest japanese scam trend is to cook mediocre food in large portions to have that "wow" factor. But in reality its to upcharge customers.
@@beethao9380
woohoo!
He is "REAL THING"
@@beethao9380もし不当に高価で売られているなら、誰かが安く売れば競争相手を簡単に打ち負かすことができるのに、誰もそれをしていない理由を考えてください 適正価格で売られているからだ
Am I the only one who felt that the sticky paste eaten by the baby eels was satisfying?:+)
Satisfying..i want to learn it if there's a lesson
It's just a dough tho
HI FRIENDSHIPS 🍼🐷🇯🇵
Those wondering why everything in Japan took years to master, must have never mastered a skill. Everything in life take years to "Master", this is not just to be sufficient or mediocre. Take music for example. It only take months to jam out melody from an instrument, a year to be proficient, and a life time to be a virtuoso. As why it seems to be a Japan specific phenomena, it has something to do with the philosophy of Ikigai, which, transliterated means "Worth of Life". Although, despite it's heavy connotation, doesn''t have to be something grandiose like changing the world or cure cancer, rather, it should define an activity or service which could bring joy and fulfillment to each individual. Tieing with that concept, it is not hard to see you'll dig deeper into any specific activity that brings fulfillment and discover new things along with devotion to its mastery.
the same goes like youre carrier its pretty common to start at one buisness and stay at the company for most of your life.
I wonder how many year it takes to become a master at licking and sticking stamps on letters?
Let's be honest though, a large part of why they say this is to justify the sky high prices of the fish.
You won't be that much better at such a mundane task years later, the skill ceiling simply isn't that high with these mundane tasks. You might be able to get a bit faster, but at some point you've found a proper way to do most of these tasks that gives consistent results, and regardless of how much time you put in, it will never get noticeably better.
That said, it is nice for people who do these mundane jobs that they get to feel more important/masterful than they would in a country that appreciates these jobs less.
The reason why the comments r like, "everything in jpan takes years to master" cuz whenever they r covering topic like this but different country, they never say "takes years to master"
@@osteogenesisdev5268 Boiled down to it's essence, everything starts from mundane tasks. We used to just simply hunt, and now there's hunting expert. We used to just simply burn food on fire, and now there's chefs. We used to bang on rocks, and now there's professional musicians. The difference here is scale. Thinking there's only fixed amount of things that could be "mastered" will make everything seems mundane. Hell, even drinking wine could be a professional career choice.
I love Unagi. Just found out it's on the endangered list. I will not eat anymore and spread the word. I was a big Unagi consumer. One of my favorite dishes. It's amazing how easy it is to say goodbye to consuming this endangered species. Maybe if we all do out part, one day these tasty morsels can thrive again and we can eat them again. I respect this creature that has tasted so good and has nourished me throughout my life. I hope it makes a come back. Thanks social media for informing me. I'll pay it forward and due my due diligence to not be a part of the problem of making an animal go extinct. American's consume 90% of the eel population. I believe in Americans to ultimately do the right thing. We are a leading nation and should set the bar on how to act responsible. God bless America and the eels we used to eat.
Why Japanese ‘Anything’ is soo expensive…
Handcrafted and excellent quality
No, because natural rescoruces are running out. Watch "Seaspiracy" so you know about this
Japanese don't seem to give a damn about overfishing lol. They are worried about prices. 😄
Bad side of Japan. They even hunt WHALES!
Basically it is only for the investigation nowadays, not for fun nor eat. No japanese eats whales in these days. I only have one time experience in the decades of my life. And many japanese has never eaten it. It is very often used for some propaganda to mind wash people like you.
Also, check Denmark whales and whales kill event, grindarap. Their tradition is continued for every year fun. If the cruelty to mammals is the matter, we really need to be a vegetarian. If the intelligence of the eaten animal is matter, neither octopus should not be consumed.
@@drepen5946 Dane here. Faroe Islands, not Denmark hunt grinde/pilot whale. They have permission to hunt the whales, Japan doesn't have one, eventhought the catch sharks. The hunters on Faroe Islands are trained in hunting humane. They eat the meat, the fat is toxic because of polution. The have qouta for how many they are allowed to hunt.
If you don't know the real facts, then don' t spew Lies. Just don't air your opinion. Your opinion is not facts!
@@ladboii2901 Please say "Don't eat cats and dogs" to Korean, Chisese and Vietnamese
The glass eel trade in Maine is insane. There have been cases of people killing each other over these things.
??? Please explain. Sounds interesting
Here in Maine they call baby eels Elvers. They sell for about $1,200 or more a pound to the buyers, then they get shipped over to Japan and other places. Only a certain amount of permits are allowed. Some permits stay in the family for generations.
i like how Japanese people always do their work professionally
Everyone : talking about the years taking to master it
Me : who gets chills and goosebumps when they show those eels
The wriggling is what I hate the most
The constant wriggling
They are so disturbing 😩
Samee here
Oh...i see that I'm not alone in this!
Every japanese skill takes a lifetime to master
It takes me 15 years to master watching RUclips videos
Including being good at sex. ;)
Ever since I was born it took me 45 years to learn how to learn a Japanese skill since were in Asia’s my parents put me through numerous tests to see what I learned when I cooked I was blindfolded with no arm and I couldn’t use my thumbs either
“He has been farming eels for almost 400 years “
one day soon he will finally master it... maybe.
It "takes a whole lifetime to master". Mate you're grilling fishies.
Lol ... absolutely
Very disrespectful. You can really taste a difference when it comes the way your food is made.
Mastery in a specialty is part of their culture and i really respect that.
But you prob. never really eat at such high quality dining places?
ah yes, just like "You are just Drawing" or just "You are just chopping wood", but you need to know, even if its simple, you have to mastery the Technique and it cost a lot of time
@@jalma9643 why won't Japan master the art of keeping the oceans healthy. Japan is just greedy I say for overfishing the oceans
@@insectbite1714 yes, they are greedy, in a matter of time, they will have *Extinc Fish* because of how greedy they to ocean, i agree with you
I’m annoyed how they didn’t mention that European and American eels are constantly used too, and imported to Japan. The European eel is now a critically endangered species, and the American eel is endangered.
That makes me physically eel
@@isuckatpickingnames3488 it’s happening less in Europe now as the EU banned export of them
@@boarbot7829 probably because the concept of the video is "why JAPANESE eel is so expensive"
@@isuckatpickingnames3488
3 words in google it's not hard to find you are just lazy
@@isuckatpickingnames3488
no you did not like i said 3 words in google and you could find your answer but you would rather make yourself look like a fool
1:05..🤔"Umm... excuse me sir, wtf did you just call me?"
lol
S e a s p i r a c y
kok sukkaa ✨
Lol
Kakakusa(価格差) = price gap
I love how Japan became a powerhouse country for technology yet they still kept their culture intact
A powerhouse country for fax machines still into the 2020s, you mean
Us is the powerhouse of technology.
Powerhouse of cooking fresh seafood at the cost of their entire ecosystem.
Any where in Asia Middle East n Africa u go u will see they all keep n value their cultures..
Just watching this made me hunger for Unagi...
Being poor sucks.
Born poor in not our choice
But staying poor... Is a choice.
@@thirteensalad3854 I like that :)
@@thirteensalad3854 hahahaha
“aaah UNAGI” (Ross.jpg)
No
Not living in Japan sucks
After 8 years of mastering the slicing, the Chef may finally achieve their final form - *Ikaku Chefomon!!!* 👾
Work, salaries, and business will make you rich but investment makes and keep you wealthy.
Your right
As an investor, it's almost inevitable that you're not going to experience ups and Down along the way of investing for yourself
The crash in price of cryto doesn't affect my trade with expert mrs Annabella Ryan. She's the best crypto trading plug.
@@michealsunday6925 are you serious? Because many have lost so much cryto because of the crash in price of cryto
@@klausstephan2047 yeah I made over $15,000 investing with Mrs Annabella Ryan and it really profitable.
It would be really fun if we got a video talking about why eels (and also maybe other fish like tuna) can't be breed in captivity.
I really like the way they eat the fish oil dough! *Disgusting yet satisfying.*
denk
First Eel:” Don’t you see what they’re doing here? They’re fattening us up, so they can eat us!”
Been to Japan many times And you can tell their food is like a masterpiece
@@missplainjane3905 as a guy that lives on earth, where japan is. i will answer all your questions
1) even though japan is high developed, they still use outdated as shit stuff
2) 9 out of 10
3) really good country
@@missplainjane3905 i lived on earth, where japan is
@@missplainjane3905 yes
@@missplainjane3905 i don't enjoy living in tokyo
@@namenotfound614
Why
Omg no wonder the catches have been slowly decreasing, They need to find a way to raise these things in captivity this is ridiculous
natural eels have very difficult cycle of life, a lot of species who rely on lake/river/sea cycle have been quite extinct due to human overfishing or settlement or pollution, in addition some species have long life cycle and wont come backj easily, some species need to have a memory of the place for resettle again, if its extinct in some place and are protected, they cant come back for decade... by example!: the cod, extinct by overfishing in the 1990 its only 30years later they come back to terre-neuve.
but fishing is the oldest way of thinking for people, even quotas and protection are never respected, this is what is going on all around the world ->overfishing->extinction all drive by price market->only most tasty food is risen...future is also very bad, more fossile fuel->co2 in air->co2 in sea->acidifcation->less plancton->less oxygen->less fish.
@@eriklerougeuh5772 its bad enough that ocean is becoming more acid each yr, some fish spices alrdy leaving the equator .
Wow, signing up for a 100-year course on grilling eel sounds like an incredible commitment to mastering such a traditional skill! Your excitement to become a grill eel master is inspiring.
Eels, another commoner’s food amped up by over harvesting and hype generated by the bourgeoisie(just look at lobsters and oysters).
Thousands of years ago a man saw an eel and said that looks delicious. Thus started the eel culture.
Or they just ate what they could? That's why in China they have eaten bats and stuff for so many years, it was tough times back then
Japan: "Mastering" the extinction of wild species
True
Exactly let's remove and entire generation and wonder why TF does no eels next year
I need to send my best friend to Japan right now
I think Africans are way ahead of the Japanese here
“It takes years to master”
A huge part of the story that wasn't discussed here: Japan has been buying wild baby eels from China for the cheap and selling them back at a huge profit for years. After China also exhausted a few rivers, they figured out how to breed baby eels at scale (IT TOOK YEARS TO MASTER!!). while Japan still couldn't. Now all Japanese eels you will ever eat come from China, even the "locally produced" ones.
ま、全てが中国産ではないから物事を単純化させないでね
@@dtodrdammwpaj9706 Just the baby eels my friend. Adult eels can come from Japan or China.
Japan - Where things are either art or expensive.
Majority is art and also expensive
China - where things are either crap or cheap. Choose one
@Cream
Have you been to both countries ?
Seriously speaking, when Japanese say "it takes years to master", it implies "you aren't perfect, just keep trying to be better".
"...until you die"
I thought it was like a caste system. Make it harder for everyone to apprentice in certain trades and keep the trade within a family or community.
Fr I hate these comments taking digs at what they're passionate about. Just taking apart an eel is already difficult enough from what I've seen on a channel called Kimagure cook. They are constantly striving to be better while these guys in the comments are..
Gordon Ramsay could teach any "chef" to grill in one night's service, all while yelling that eel is RAW!
*Flips over eel skewer*
Finally... I have waited my whole life to master this art
Every comments here: "Takes years to Master"
Commenting takes a lifetime to master.
I'm keeping one of these as a pet currently, didn't know they were pricey. Bought mine from a local fish store for 3$ ( converted from my local currency ). I feed him bloodworms
3$?! I catched mine from the nearest rice fields for free, with no equipment required, got a little bit dirty but I got five of them
Which country are you from?
@@anitachandra2030 South East Asia overall, eel is almost everywhere
@@anitachandra2030 Indonesiq
@@fathfez7991 Sidat is what we call them
Ahhh there’s nothing more soothing then random documentaries on a Saturday night
I agree with u
I don't know about you, but for me, it's taken a lifetime to master the art of going about doing #1 & #2... I'm still working on it every day...
At the end of the day, it is all business. Unless theres an outside organization that checks the actual harvest of the young eels, the farmer gets to dictate the price you pay.
When I’m done learning how to make grilled eels, they might extinct.
"why is japanese eel so expensive?"
Me:Because it is japanese that's why?
Nothing grow or breed in Japan is cheap
@@Blunt.lounge_01
That’s because they are fed & cared with more money than people in America.
Reason: Seaspiracy
@@MP-vc4nu Japan does not care about ocean conversation
@@insectbite1714 are you one of those China backing people but also didn’t see that China brought nuclear materials to the Indian port?
I am a Japanese and I would like to ask those who laugh at the saying that it takes a lifetime to master the cooking of eel this question: Can you claim to have mastered even one thing in your life? In Japan, there are many traditional crafts, and artisans spend a lifetime honing their skills. Examples include Japanese swords, sushi, and kimonos."
it's so bizarre how no one knows how eels breed
Eels are special. European eel for example only reproduce in one location on the entire earth, the sargasso sea. They migrate back and forth across the entire world. That's one of the reason why they're in danger of extinction. Many eels die because of turbines in dams etc.
Also the Japanese are stealing the glass eels from British rivers.
Eels have a wierd way of breeding they lay eggs in the sea , then the larvae come to fresh water to live so it's quiet conplex to breed then
@@jimmy2minutes And in Spain glass eels is a delicacy. No wonder they are going extinct.