Monday, July 26, 2010

conspicuous consumption, kobe-style

...New York City restaurants were clogged with loud, pin-striped, yet-to-be-indicted fuck-nuts hedge funders who relished the opportunity to showily throw a hundred dollars at a burger. Kobe, after all, was the "best" beef in the world, wasn't it? It came from, like, Japan, from, like, special cows who get . . . massaged in beer and shit, don't they? "I hear they even jack them off!!"

This was the story going around anyway, as high-flying day traders from some by-now-defunct investment bank or brokerage house hurried, lemming-like, to order the "best burger ever." Of course, chances are, the "Kobe beef" in that Kobe beef burger had never been anywhere near Japan. It was a distant relative at best—and even if the sublimely fatty product of pampered Wagyu cattle was used in the burger, it would have been (and remains) an utterly pointless, supremely wasteful, and even unpleasant exercise.

What makes a Wagyu steak so desirable is the unbelievably prodigious marbling of fat that runs through it—often as much as 50 percent. Its resulting tenderness and richness, and the subtle—repeat—subtle flavor. When grinding a hamburger, you can put in as much fat as you like—just reach in the fat can and drop it in the machine—so there's no reason to pay a hundred bucks for a burger. A burger, presumhly, already is about as tender as a piece of meat can be—and a taste so subtle as real Wagyu's would, in any case, be lost were you to do something so insensitive as bury it between two buns and slather it with ketchup.

A six-ounce tataki of real Wagyu steak, seared rare and sliced thinly, is about all you want or can eat in a sitting. It's that rich. It'll hood your head with so much fat you'll quickly reach a point of diminishing returns. Even an eight-ounce "Kobe burger" made from real Wagyu would be an exercise in futility—and pretty disgusting.

But no. The cream of big-city douchedom ordered these things in droves, bragging about it all the way. It quickly became clear to chefs and restaurateurs that there was a huge, previously untapped market out there for expensive hamburgers—that customers at a certain income level, clearly, were willing, even eager, to pay more. All you had to do was put a "brand" name next to the word "hamburger" and you could add value. That brand could be the name of a famous chef (many of whom wisely began to flock to the concept) or the name of a boutique producer (something that, like the word "Kobe," implied specially raised, artisanal, humanely treated, organic, or sexually satisfied cattle). Chefs added "extras" like foie gras, truffles, braised oxtail, the exotic cheeses of many lands.



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