Food

Saturday, July 4, 2009

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The most expensive grapes in the world

OK, the rising cost of food is inconvenient. No, it bites.

But no matter how outrageous you think your weekly grocery bill is at the local Acme or A&P supermarket, at least you're not shelling out nearly $1,000 for a single bunch of grapes.

That's right: $910 for a bunch of 30 grapes, or about $30 per grape, which is what one Japanese hotel owner paid Monday at auction in Ishikawa.

Of course, they weren't your average jam-making grapes. These were Ruby Roman grapes, the product of a special government-funded program that took 14 years to come to literal fruition. Agriculture official Hirofumi Isu called them "delicious: sweet but fresh at the same time, very well balanced." The hotel owner said he planned to serve them to select guests at his upscale hotel, Kagaya.

"We wanted to delight our customers and also wanted to wish producers good luck" the hotel's chief cook said.

In the context of the fruit-buying culture of certain East Asian countries like Japan, it's not as ridiculous as it sounds. Square-shaped watermelons (all the rage a few years ago, if you remember), go for something like $100, while the most popular variety of more "common" grapes average $90 a bunch. Bunches of the new Ruby Romans seem to be fetching about $245 each so far, generally speaking. As a kid on an overseas trip once, I remember my brother and me racing up and down a fruit market, poking gold-colored labels on the undersized melons, only to discover 10 minutes later that the labels were made of real gold, and that we'd caused several hundreds of dollars of damage. To this day, I've got an irrational aversion to canteloupes and honeydews.

What food would you actually be willing to spend $1,000 for in return for a single serving? What food faux pas have you committed thanks to differing cultural views on the value of a certain dish? What should the grape buyer actually have done with his $910 grapes? (My vote is to use them to make jam sandwich cookies with $300 flour and $200 sugar.)

Michael Y. Park is a writer living in Brooklyn, New York. He studied medieval history as an undergraduate at the University of Chicago, and journalism as a graduate student at New York University. His stories have appeared in publications including The New York Times, the New York Post, and the Toronto Globe and Mail.




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From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 11
  • jessica's Avatar
    Posted by jessica Wed Aug 13, 2008 10:26am PDT

    wow

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  • Mango's Avatar
    Posted by Mango Wed Aug 13, 2008 11:40am PDT

    Were those variety of grapes a descendant of Julius Cesear's vineyard? No? Not worth 910 bucks!!!! Food SHOULD be affordable to everyone...

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  • Caramel Cake's Avatar
    Posted by Caramel Cake Thu Aug 14, 2008 8:32am PDT

    I would not pay that much for food. Food is to be consumed, and to pay that much for something that is going to be pooped right out anyway, just doesn't make sense to me.

    t

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  • billy bong's Avatar
    Posted by billy bong Thu Aug 14, 2008 11:57am PDT

    id eat those f**kers up and run away

    Report Abuse
  • Tiffany's Avatar
    Posted by Tiffany Thu Aug 14, 2008 5:47pm PDT

    LMAO! Caramel Cake and believeland420....you two just cracked me the he** up!! lol! I would NEVER pay that much for some grapes, whether I was rich or average income individual...that's just friggin rediculous. People are so retarded to buy grapes at that price....even if they are from the loins of Julius Cesear.

    Report Abuse
  • mayaDIVA's Avatar
    Posted by mayaDIVA Thu Aug 14, 2008 6:28pm PDT

    what are you guys talking about? just $910, man i want 15 bunches of 30! what a deal! i mean the us has to be a little more competitive if it wants to be that price. i mean we are getting robbed over here in the us of a.

    no but seriously, thats sick. that and the million dollar burger, icecream and other s--- that is a waste of time AND money. Poorer countries need money like that so its citizens can just eat basic stuff like bread. its just another sign of the times.

    Report Abuse
  • ldycheroke57's Avatar
    Posted by ldycheroke57 Fri Aug 15, 2008 5:16am PDT

    I can't help thinking how we've been going without things like milk and meat and buying less of others like fruit and bread and fresh produce. I forget that there are people in the world so rich that money doesn't mean much and they think nothing of throwing it around like this. That money would have been better spent buying groceries for a dozen poor families...

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  • mnrawker's Avatar
    Posted by mnrawker Fri Aug 15, 2008 2:04pm PDT

    holy hell. I could pay off my student loans by selling a couple bunches of those. That is freaking ridiculous.

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  • Skilletfan10000's Avatar
    Posted by Skilletfan10000 Fri Aug 15, 2008 3:04pm PDT

    910$? If GRAPES cost that much to japanese hotel owners, then I'm havin a YARD SALE!!! But seriously, are Roman-whatever grapes worth that?

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  • addybme's Avatar
    Posted by addybme Sat Aug 16, 2008 4:31pm PDT

    Wow, I could sell about 30 bunches of those grapes and pay off the mortgage on my house!!! to heck with 30 years, just give me 30 bunches of grapes!!!

    Report Abuse
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