JAPAN: With food shows making up 40 per cent of domestic TV programming, the Japanese may be overdoing it, writes Anthony Faiola, in Tokyo
On a quest for the "ultimate ingredients", a team of food explorers from a hit television show here scaled mountains seeking the perfect mushroom and braved stormy seas off Alaska to catch extra-plump salmon.
On a rival network, celebrities on Love's Apron amuse audiences by bungling complicated recipes. In another local smash-hit show, the members of a boy band prepare tasty treats for a constellation of guest stars whose ranks include prime minister Junichiro Koizumi.
That's just for starters on Japanese TV, where food shows are what's cooking - the programmes have become the cash cows of prime time.
Food has long been a major staple of Japanese broadcasting and with most popular cooking and gourmet shows far cheaper to produce than star-powered dramas, TV producers and researchers say food shows now account for an estimated 35 to 40 per cent of all domestic programming.
In this island nation, famous for healthy and long-living citizens rather than bulging waistlines, the shows' popularity underscores a less well-known Japanese obsession: eating.
There are few societies where food appears more exalted - or expensive. Japan is the home of the $15 (€13) apple, the $5 piece of chocolate, beef from Kobe and kaiseki ryori - seasonal delicacies served in numerous small courses and gorgeously presented on decorative bowls and plates. Emphasis is on quality, not quantity, and one pays accordingly. Price tags for such meals can top $400 for each person.
Almost every town of any significant size in Japan boasts well-stocked "food souvenir" shops at airports and train stations, where visitors snap up regional specialities. Thousands of food pilgrims regularly flock to the countryside in search of seasonal dishes. Japanese travel agencies call food one of the main engines of international travel. Kinki Nippon Tourist, a leading travel agency, peddles scores of popular food-themed escapes, including sweets tours of Taiwan and afternoon tea trips to Hong Kong.
Chefs, particularly those with their own TV shows, enjoy cult status. At Tokyo's uber-popular La Bettola da Ochiai restaurant, owned by celebrity chef Tsutomu Ochiai, demand for dinner reservations is so high that requests must be made months in advance - and even then only on the third Sunday of odd-numbered months. Lunch hopefuls form lines hours before opening time.
Particularly in vogue are shows featuring celebrity "food tasters" who travel to towns across the country to sample local delicacies. In what has become a defining image of domestic TV culture, the camera moves in for a close-up of a glistening mouthful of food dangling scrumptiously from a pair of chopsticks. The morsel then slips into the mouth of a taster, whose eyes go wide before the inevitable exclamation, "Oishii!" - Japanese for delicious.
Presentation and visual appeal are as important as taste. Food shows must often shoot many takes to capture a morsel's full appeal.
"If the steam isn't blowing off the food in just the right way, people will not be as fascinated and will not see the food as delicious," said Motonobu Nakamura, the director of the "ultimate ingredients" show Which Dish?. "The idea is to make the viewer feel that they are actually eating the food themselves," he says.
On Nakamura's programme, two dishes are prepared using the best ingredients, then a panel decides which one to eat. The show plays to Japanese viewers' focus on the most minute of details. During a recent episode - grilled salmon versus miso-marinated mackerel - commentators tracking down wild salmon in Alaska offered a locator map of migration patterns and a scientific explanation for the development of the fish's reddish-pink flesh. Later, intense close-ups of fat sizzling off the grilling salmon led one commentator to proclaim, "I have never seen such a beautiful thing before."
Food secrets are jealously guarded. One Japanese farmer agreed to lead crew members from Which Dish? to his mountain mushroom patch only if they did not disclose the location. Mushrooms are a recurring theme. In another episode, emotive music accompanied the tale of a farmer's daily struggle to cultivate ever more succulent King Pearl mushrooms using a home-grown mixture of horse manure and hay.
Yet some Japanese wonder whether the daily cornucopia being served up on TV may be one reason for the gradually rising national obesity rate revealed in recent studies.
A proliferation of western-style fast food and popular instant noodle dishes have received much of the blame - but are all those delicious TV spreads whetting the national appetite a bit too much?
"The Japanese love the culture of food," said Yukio Hattori, who was one of the creators of Iron Chef and now has nine food-related shows on the air, "but we have to be careful. We don't want to lose sight of the need to eat right."