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Japan's obsession with perfect fruit

Roland Buerk By Roland Buerk BBC News, Tokyo and Shizuoka

Giving fruit as a gift is a common custom in Japan. But this fruit is not your

normal greengrocers' produce, complete with bumps, bruises and blemishes. The

pick of the crop is grown with exquisite care and attention to detail - and

commands an eye-watering price when it comes to market.

Classical music plays softly over the speakers in the Senbikiya shop in central

Tokyo. The uniformed members of staff are politely attentive, ushering the

customers to chairs and crouching down beside them to take their orders.

The ceilings are high, the fittings elegant, the lighting tasteful and the

displays are beautiful. But this is not some designer handbag emporium or

high-end jewellery store. Senbikiya is a greengrocers.

Ushio Oshima is showing us around. He is a sixth-generation member of the

shop's founding family. The business began back in the 19th century, piling

fruit high and selling it cheap.

Gift of gratitude

That was until the wife of the second-generation owner astutely realised the

real money was to be made by inverting the business model. Now Senbikiya must

surely be the most expensive fruit shop in the world.

There are apples, the size of a child's head, with evenly red, blemish-free

skin on sale for 2,100 yen, or $25. That's each, not for a bag. Senbikiya Queen

Strawberries come in boxes of twelve perfectly matched fruits at 6,825 yen,

$83. Even on a slow day they sell 50 boxes.

Then there are the melons, each perfect, of course, and topped with identical

T-shaped green stalks. They're 34,650 yen, or $419, for three.

"We specialise in gift-giving, fruits as gifts," says Mr Oshima. "So it really

needs to look good. The appearance is a very important part of it. Then there's

the service. The combination is what you pay for."

Japan has two gift-giving seasons a year, one in summer and one in winter.

Family members exchange presents but the tradition goes well beyond that.

People offer presents to express gratitude, such as to their bosses. Companies

often send gifts to customers and business partners.

Senbikiya has carved out a niche for itself at the very top of the market. For

the Japanese it is similar to Issey Miyake's status among fashion lovers, or

Rolls Royce to car aficionados. But the desire for fruit perfection goes well

beyond that.

Visitors to Japan are often surprised by the displays in supermarkets - and the

prices. Mis-shapen produce is kept off the shelves, and blemishes are banished.

Grapes come in small, heavily-packaged bunches, each fruit the size of a plum

and so sweet and flavoursome that Westerners may think they taste fake.

Even run-of-the-mill apples can cost $2 or more each in central Tokyo, and

families tend to share one or two around the dinner table, chopped up.

"When it comes to fruit it is still a luxurious item, not like vegetables,"

says Hiroko Ishikawa, who runs a fruit distribution business. "Vegetables you

need for daily life but you can live without eating fruit. So if you are to buy

something you might as well buy something that looks good. You don't want

scarred or deformed because you are paying for the fruit. It just looks

better."

Ms Ishikawa deals in domestically grown fruit as well as imports. But she has

no doubt where the money is.

"It's the mind of Japanese," she says. "Japanese-made is better."

The willingness to pay more - much more - for Japanese fruit has spawned some

unusual industries. In Shizuoka prefecture, an hour-and-a-half by train

south-west of Tokyo, 600 farmers strive to grow perfect melons, even when there

is snow on the ground.

Masaomi Suzuki has been working in his steamy greenhouses for 50 years, but

even after all that time he says he still learns something new every day.

The process begins with the perfect seeds. The local farmers' association

breeds a new strain every year, seeking continuous improvements. Weak seedlings

are weeded out. Then when the flowers appear, poor specimens are ruthlessly

plucked and discarded.

Labour-intensive

By the time the fruits start to develop each vine has been left with just one,

so all the nutrients can be concentrated into one lone, sweet, juicy melon.

The pruning is precise and the melons grow in even rows in the greenhouses, all

at exactly the same height. Their stalks are helped to bear the weight by

strings. And as they mature the fruits are given little plastic hats to wear

"to prevent sunburn", a risk Mr Suzuki is keen to avoid even under glass in

chilly February.

"I believe this is the most labour-intensive method out of all the melon

farming all over Japan," he says. "We call it the Shizuoka method. In other

places they do it differently and get multiple melons from each vine. But this

takes by far the most effort."

Farmer Masaomi Suzuki and melons (Pic: Alfie Goodrich) Farmer Masaomi Suzuki

has to keep the temperature constant to achieve the perfect crop

The ideal is a flawless sphere, pale green with an even, smooth pattern of

webbing and of course the all-important T-shaped stalk. The very top grade of

Shizuoka melon is classified as the Fuji, something Mr Suzuki estimates that,

even with his craftsman's hands, he achieves with only 3% of his produce.

Growing perfect melons to satisfy the Japanese market is a costly business. On

Mr Suzuki's farm - just three medium sized greenhouses - he gets through 55

litres of heating oil a day to maintain the ideal growing temperature.

He adjusts the settings when the sun goes in and out and when the wind changes

to maintain it precisely, going to the farm day and night, 365 days a year. He

says he and his family have never been away together because someone always

needs to be on call. If it got too hot or cold in the greenhouses for even a

brief period the entire crop could be ruined.

Little wonder Mr Suzuki rejects the idea that $100 melons are expensive. No

way, he says. They're a bargain.