Source: The Japan Times: Yen for Living
Date: October 6th, 2011
by: Philip Brasor & Masako Tsubuku
Japan’s rice harvest season started at the end of August, and is
presently centered on the Tohoku region; or, at least it would be
centered there if so much of the crop hadn’t been neutralized by the
Mar. 11 tsunami and then what was left wasn’t contaminated by fallout
from the stricken Fukushima No. 1 nuclear reactor. Japanese people prize
rice grown in the northeastern part of the country more than rice grown
anywhere else, and they prefer new rice (shinmai), the newer
the better. This is a cultural thing, since in some countries — India
and Italy, for instance — older rice is considered something of a
delicacy.
...
Read full article here
Thursday, October 6, 2011
10/6/2011 Rice market turned upside down by radiation fears
Labels:
Japan,
radiation contamination,
radioactive food,
rice,
rice futures
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