投稿タグ: Japanese Nature
A “Delicious” Economy to Change the Future of Society—Living in a Country with the Best Food in the World
Japan can perhaps be called the country with the best food in the world.
In a global survey asking which countries people most want to visit after the pandemic, Japan was number one among people living in Asia and number two among those in Europe and the US. In both cases, Japan was at the top end of the list. Moreover, the number one reason people wish to visit Japan is said to be for its food. As this suggests, while many foreign visitors to Japan come in search of delicious food, Japan in fact has the highest number of Michelin-starred restaurants in the world. The total number of stars and three-star restaurants in Tokyo far exceeds that of Paris, which can be called the home of Michelin star framework. A characteristic of the restaurant industry in Japan is that many Japanese chefs have honed their skills not only in Japanese cuisine, but also in French, Italian, and other foreign cuisines, and have earned Michelin stars. Further, outside of Michelin stars, there are countless numbers of Japanese chefs who have won first place in international cooking competitions such as the Pasta World Championships and the World Pizza Championships. We can therefore say that Japan is the country that evolves tastes of other countries in more delicious way.
Elsewhere, Japan has an abundance of delicious, seasonal foods from both the sea and the mountains. Thanks to an excellent supply chain, customers can consume these ingredients while they are still fresh. Meanwhile, advanced fermentation techniques developed in the preserved food culture have broadened the range of umami flavors. There are many positive aspects of Japanese food, such as the diversity of food culture, which varies from region to region, including traditional and local cuisine, and the high level of “seasoning technology” in factories producing seasonings and processed foods. Alongside its “deliciousness” technology, Japanese food is also highly regarded worldwide for its health benefits and for its lower environmental impact compared to Western food. In 2005, the number of Japanese restaurants overseas stood at approximately 25,000. In 2010 this number doubled to 50,000, and expanded to 150,000 in 2020. With such wonderful characteristics, it is essential that we seriously address how to maintain and develop our globally respected food culture. Doing so can help Japanese food culture maintain its dominance over the centuries.
In a future of exploding world population, food will become a global growth industry. In this sense, Japan’s food culture can become a major competitive advantage due to its superior technology and long tradition. However, people living in Japan are yet to realize the possibilities that their food assets can bring. Resources related to food, such as expertise on natural environment, agriculture and fisheries, as well as seasoning techniques, are gradually being lost and replaced by elements from overseas. Without a vision, much like the lost decades of the past, many of our food assets will and quietly disappear without being passed on, perhaps within several years from now.
How, then, should we utilize Japan’s food assets?
One key to doing so will be the sharing of a vision. I have termed this approach Japan’s Delicious Future Strategy. Clarifying the route to becoming a “delicious economic power” is an important growth strategy for Japan’s era of so-called degrowth.
In contrast to skyrocketing global populations, Japan is facing an unprecedented population decline caused by low birthrates and an aging population. I believe that the best and most positive strategy to utilize Japan’s existing assets is to combine accumulated food traditions and techniques in a new way, based on the excellent asset of “Japanese food”, to create the abovementioned delicious economic power. Japanese society today is operating under a system that was established in the era of mass production and mass consumption, and is based on the assumption that the population will increase. It is only natural that problems will occur if we try to maintain this system in a declining population. We must therefore switch our mindset and consider a way of life that ensures happiness even with fewer people.
Meanwhile, some countries around the world are learning from Japanese food. One such example is The Culinary Institute of America, also known as the Harvard of culinary schools in America. This is because Japanese food is delicious, sustainable, and healthy, which are the elements that Japan does best. A truly enjoyable lifestyle is one that satisfies both physical and mental health. Eating a delicious and healthy meal with friends in a natural environment can bring the same level of pleasure and satisfaction as any form of entertainment.
As the world’s first self-sustaining community, the ReGen Village in the Netherlands have succeeded in attracting the wealthy. In Estonia, meanwhile, the e-Residency system allows access to the country’s transparent business environment, which is favored by many leading companies. Considering what Japan can do, there is great potential if we seriously promote the healthy and delicious aspects of our food culture. If we can provide healthy, delicious experiences, and demonstrate the evidence behind it, visitors will no doubt come flocking. Further, when tourists look for a destination, Japan has a certain advantage over other potential destinations because of its safety, cleanliness, and food safety and security. Regardless of tourism, there are many elements that make up attractive communities in Japan. Incorporating such people into an ecosystem like those seen in the Netherlands and Estonia can help Japan become an entirely new, delicious economic power.
It’s easy to boast that Japanese cuisine and Japanese food is the best. That said, the origins of Japanese food can be found in many different Asian food cultures. A Meiji-period philosopher Okakura Tenshin said in his The Book of Tea, published in New York, “The Western world, which is superior to nature, must learn from the Eastern way of thinking, which is one with nature and coexist with it.” Rather than making the way of life in harmony with nature and the joy of healthy and delicious food as uniquely Japanese elements, it’s important to communicate them to the world while respecting the awareness that Japan has received these benefits from Asia. Further, contributing to the resolution of issues in East Asian countries struggling with declining birthrates and aging populations next to Japan is something that only Japan can do, and it will also help to cultivate a sense of leadership.
To conclude, I would like to introduce my ten guiding principles to ensure Japan to become a delicious economic power. While these are guidelines for Japanese food, at the same time they are also domestic economic measures and that they will help Japan contribute to the international society in a uniquely Japanese way. These ten guiding principles aim to enhance the Japanese brand and generate a positive, global cycle through food.
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1. Geo Gastronomy
With mountains of varying heights, broad ocean areas and powerful ocean currents, and diverse regional characteristics filled with nature’s blessings, Japan is home to water and land that are full of vitality. The purity of the cuisine nurtured by this water and land, strength of the ingredients, and delightful tastes should be expressed by each region.
2. Seasonality
Humans have lived in harmony with nature in each of the four seasons for thousands of years. It is important to review this history, look forward to spring, and be thankful for the autumnal harvest. For the future, we must sharpen the emotions and rhythms associated with the seasonal changes unique to Asia, such as the 24solar terms and the 72 solar terms.
3. Satoyama and Satoumi Lifestyles
It is important to share our appreciation to our ancestors for creating the satoumi ecosystems, and to pay respect to the activities to connect it to the future. We must position these ecosystems as universal models of successful life and food cycles, and strive to disseminate these models worldwide.
4. Carrying on a Healthy Food Culture
Japan and other Asian countries have developed various food and lifestyle cultures, such as fermented foods and fermentation technology, that have been created for health and happiness. We must therefore interpret these wisdoms as new recipes, pass them on with children of the next generation, enhance the platform for research and practice to share, and expand opportunities for learning.
5. Tolerance of Cultural Diversity
As seen in its respect for various gods (kami) and coexistence with nature, Japan has incorporated various foreign cultures into its life and developed them over time. It is important that we maintain this diverse and generous curiosity and fulfill our role as a gastronomy hub connecting the world’s food cultures with “delicious” food.
6. Global Perspective
We must always be aware of future food issues and changes in values and tastes, and consider how the characteristics of Japan’s regional foods can co-create and synchronize with the world while contributing to its development. We must spare no effort to establish such everlasting relationships.
7. SDGs
Japanese food culture is environmentally friendly and healthy, and has the potential to be a solution for sustainability. On the other hand, we must be ready to confront problems unique to Japan, such as food waste, so that we can realize a fully circular society.
8. Branding and Design
It is important to strengthen communication and brand strategies in all food categories by utilizing IT and design. In turn, we must contribute to the branding of not only food, but also Japan as a whole, by creating various stories related to food and communicate them to the world.
9. Utilization of Technology
By combining the techniques of artisans that poduce unique Japanese tastes with cutting-edge technologies such as AI and food tech, we must bring together the wisdom of all those involved in food, aim to create intellectual property, and promote the creation of a delicious global community with which the world can interact.
10. Creation of a Food Industry Community
We must position the creation of the world’s most delicious society at the core of Japan’s growth society by collaborating with a multitude of stakeholders such as from various industries -including not only food service, agriculture, fisheries, food-related companies and retailers, but also entertainment companies, electrical appliance stores and mobility businesses-, academia and politicians.
The most important thing is to value the pleasure that food brings, the pleasure that interaction brings, and the pleasure that life brings. This is the key to Japan’s future growth strategy.
Food and Food Culture are Key to Environmental Solutions
Today we face various global issues, such as global warming due to human activities, loss of biodiversity, nitrogen pollution, and COVID-19. From Japan, it might seem like some of these are irrelevant matters in a faraway world. However, with products and information travel all across the globe in the blink of an eye, the world has gotten smaller. Things that have been pushed off as a hassle sometimes come back full circle. Japan procures food, animal feed, raw materials, and fuel from various countries worldwide, and bears a great deal of responsibility for future possibilities. That is, if Japan gets serious about solving these global issues, it can make the world better connected through trade. This is perhaps the very purpose of Cool Japan.
Moving on, some of you may be unfamiliar with nitrogen pollution. Nitrogen is an essential element for proteins, nucleic acids, and other biomolecules. Humans absorb nitrogen from food proteins. Nitrogen (N2) is ubiquitous, and accounts for around 80% of the Earth’s atmosphere. However, N2 is incredibly stable and cannot do much by itself. Only when it is transformed into a reactive compound such as ammonia can it be used as a fertilizer for crop production, a raw material for industrial production, and a fuel for energy production. Technology for the artificial synthesis of ammonia was put to practical use in the early 20th century, and since then nitrogen has brought great benefits to us as a fertilizer for mass food production. That said, much of the nitrogen we use is released into the atmosphere in a reactive state. This in turn leads to a wide range of environmental problems such as global warming, stratospheric ozone depletion, air pollution, water pollution, eutrophication, and acidification. These combined environmental impacts are known as nitrogen pollution.
Our world is huge but finite. Including ourselves, there are many different living things in the world, and we all influence and impact each other. Human activities have become so large that they have drastically changed the material cycle and in turn caused various environmental problems. In doing so, we have made the world more difficult for other organisms to survive. There are many things we can do to ensure that future generations can live in happiness, and to ensure that the world’s living things can remain as they are. Food is one element of our daily lives that is closely linked to global issues. The production, distribution, processing, consumption, and disposal of food are significant sources of greenhouse gases and nitrogen. The production of some food has a particularly large impact on the environment. When food is wasted, the resources that have been used in every process from its production to its delivery to the consumer are also put to waste. Reexamining the handling of food, as the accumulation of small improvements, can ultimately play an important role in solving global environmental problems. Japan is home to a rich food culture, abundant ingredients, and most importantly, outstanding human resources. In addition to revisiting food culture from all over Japan, we must also seek to create a new food culture. By thinking about food sustainability together, implementing it, and communicating it to the rest of the world, I hope we can inspire future possibilities. Food and food culture are the key to solving the world’s many environmental problems.
Pointers for Circular Economies from Satoyama Culture
More than ten years have passed since COP10 was held in Nagoya and the world was introduced to the concept of satoyama—a unique environment where people and nature coexist in harmony— and the concept seems to be gradually taking root. Elsewhere, the impacts of climate change are becoming more apparent worldwide, and the COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated the need for society to take a new direction.
While the definition of circular economy seems to vary to region, the main concept is that—in contrast to a linear economy (use and dispose) and even reuse—a system where used products and materials disposed in the production process are reproduced into new products, given new value, and then sold again.
In many rural regions of Japan, where the satoyama wisdom has been passed down from generations to generations, this circular approach is a core of people’s lives and continues to this day.
With rice, for example, the ingredient in Japanese sake and sushi, both of which are becoming increasing popular worldwide, an incredibly efficient cycle has been in place for generations. It is a well-known fact that sake lees, a byproduct of sake brewing, are used to make amazake (a sweet, non-alcoholic sake) and a wide range of pickles including Narazuke. Meanwhile, in the production of daiginjo and other types of sake with high rice polishing ratio, a large amount of rice flour is generated as a byproduct. This rice flour is reused in rice crackers and dumplings. Rice bran is another byproduct of the production process, and in the Hida area of Japan where I live, this has been reused as a kind of wax for polishing the floors and pillars of wooden houses for many years. Further, after the rice bran has been used to care for the home, it is then scattered onto nearby fields, returned to the soil, and reused as fertilizer for new crops.
Examples such as these are too numerous to see throughout satoyama areas. Another example can be seen in the use of the kaya grasses used to make thatched roofs, such as those in the UNESCO World Heritage site of Shirakawa-go. Harvested grass is used as snow shelters in the drying process, and then used for thatched roofs after drying. Later, part of the roof that have been damaged by wind and rain is removed and reused as livestock feed. This is then digested by the livestock and returned to the soil to complete a highly sophisticated circular system.
The word mottainai—that is unfortunate for anything to go to waste-has attracted attention in the past, but the source of the creation such a system in our lifestyle seem to have its roots unmistakably in the Japanese mentality. I believe that this approach holds a wealth of clues for the future of social formation.
There is also another perspective we must examine when learning from satoyama areas to create circular economies. This is bartering, or the exchange of goods without using money. It was not so long ago when I spoke with a neighbor who had acquired his garage in exchange for a gallon of sake. Sharing out the vegetables you have harvested with your neighbors, making pickles from the vegetables you receive, and then giving this back to others. Whether it is sake or farm products, this approach can be thought of as an element of a virtuous cycle between the deities who bring about a good harvest and local citizens. Perhaps our ancestors already known the importance of connection when forming societies. In the quest for convenience, in modern society we have reaped the benefits from the market and monetary economies, but these systems are far from perfect. In order for us to create a new, more enriched society in the future, it is essential that we learn quickly from satoyama and satoumi ecosystems and take the necessary actions. We must not delay, as with declining and aging populations, it can be said that the future of satoyama areas are not that long anymore.
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Education & Geo-gastronomy
“Let’s think about ways to minimize food mileage,” “If we can reduce meat consumption by promoting vegan foods, we can cut CO2 emissions,” and “I wonder if there are any local foods that have gone unnoticed…”—These are some of the remarks from a class of sixth grade students at the Keio Yochisha Elementary School. The classroom discussion among these sixth grade students is gaining momentum as they seek to widely communicate their ideas to society.
In November 2021, one class from the sixth grade at Keio Yochisha Elementary School participated in the Islander Summit Ishigaki, giving an online presentation on the theme “Food of the Future.”
For me, developing ambitions and ideas to transform society for the better is an important part of education. As such, using my position as a teacher, I have sought to shine a light on the relationship between the environment and food—something which children will be familiar with—and set up the following activities on the “Food of the Future” theme.
October
– A lesson from Kenichi Watanabe, representative at Geo Gastronomy, introducing a whole range of food-related issues and advanced case studies.
– An online lecture and interaction with Tomoko Kitamura Nielsen, environmental director on the Danish island Lolland, talking about food-related environmental awareness in Denmark and advanced case studies.
– An online lecture and interaction with Hitoshi Sugiura, winner of the gold prize at the World Vegan Cooking Contest, about the environmental impact of food and vegan cuisine.
– Use of official World Food Forum videos as teaching materials to further understanding of the diversity, cyclicity, and sustainability of food.
November
– Presentation at the Islander Summit and comments from experts.
– Online lecture and interaction with Prof. Seiko Shirasaka from the Graduate School of System Design and Management at Keio University about advanced space utilization and environmental issues from a space perspective.
Something that every child around the world does every day is sit down for a meal. Helping children understand the relationship between food and the environment can help them realize the close link between themselves and society’s problems.
In the lesson from Kenichi Watanabe, children were surprised to learn about the katemono (edible wild plants) recipes that were made to overcome hunger in the Yonezawa domain during the Edo period. Some children suggested that if we had a modern-day version of these katemono recipes, we might be able to help countries suffering from food shortages.
For many years, the emphasis in schools has been learning from textbooks. I believe that now is the time for students to directly confront the issues facing society and think about possible solutions.
In education moving forward, thinking about solutions to food issues will be the ideal way to encourage people to examine solutions for wider social challenges.
My aim is to use education based on geo gastronomy to develop the desire to take ownership of social issues and find the necessary solutions.