October 6th, 2016 โ The worldโs biggest fish market is Tsukiji Shijo in Tokyo, and it never stops moving.
All night long, refrigerated trucks deliver fresh fish from across Japan and frozen seafood caught around the world. At dawn, Tsukijiโs tuna wholesalers huddle in a chilly room and inspect whatโs been hauled in.
โPeople with sense can tell the quality of the fish right away,โ says wholesaler Eiji Kusumoto. โThose without? No matter how much they look at the fish, they wonโt know.โ
Kusumoto buys 10 to 15 giant tuna each morning at auction. He and rival fish sellers peruse and poke the tuna to decide how much theyโre worth. This is serious business: a single fish once sold for $1.8 million.
When bells ring out across the auction floor, the appraisal period is over. Auctioneers holler out prices in a rhapsodic chant, and then the bidding starts.
โThe bids are made by putting out your fingers โ one, two, three, four. One [finger] could mean 1,000 yen, 10,000, yen, or 100,000 yen. But when you look at the fish, everyone knows which it is,โ Kusumoto says.
When the auctionโs done, Kusumotoโs tuna are loaded onto wooden carts and rolled to his stall on the market floor. He and his son cut the huge fish with band saws and toss the heads and other scraps into buckets. They lay the deep pink fleshy pieces out for chefs and shopkeepers to inspect.
At Tsukiji, thereโs an art to that arrangement.
โWe display the fish so that you can see the fat content and color easily,โ Kusumoto says.
And if they do it well, theyโre sold out by 11 a.m.
Kusumoto and his son are the third and fourth generation of their family to do this kind of work at Tsukiji. And theyโll likely be the last. The market is expected to close this winter.