Raw Beef from a Vending Machine: Only in Japan?

I was walking back to my hotel in Gero Onsen when I passed a vending machine selling frozen raw beef and stopped to take a photo.
Okay, so Japan isn’t the only place where meat is sold from vending machines. I’ve heard you can also find meat vending machines outside some butchers in South Korea, Japan’s near neighbour, and also in Israel and some parts of Europe, especially France, where some butchers use refrigerated machines to sell raw meat after hours.
What feels different here is how ordinary it seems. My surprise at what was on offer was only momentary. This is Japan! You can find vending machines almost everywhere, selling almost everything! In Hiroshima, for example, where “okonomiyaki” is a popular local dish, you can find vending machines selling okonomiyaki. And then there’s Japan’s (ahem) “adult novelty machines” that once sold what was claimed to be… ladies… used… panties.
Given that, in Gero Onsen, it is not really so surprising that you can find a couple of vending machines selling the local speciality - Hida Beef, as well as pork and fried chicken, in frozen, vacuum-sealed packages.
All of the higher-priced beef in the machine on the left in the photo is labelled Hidagyu (飛騨牛) = Hida beef. Hida beef is a type of wagyu (和牛) or Japanese beef raised and graded in Gifu Prefecture, where Gero Onsen is located. Like other well-known Japanese beef brands, Hidagyu is carefully regulated and valued for its marbling and texture.
The Hida beef selection ranges in price from around ¥1,000 to ¥4,000. It offers cuts such as shio-karubi (salted short rib), momo (lean red meat), and sirloin steak.
The second machine carries more everyday items, including chicken karaage and nattoku buta, a branded domestic pork priced at ¥1,000.
The vending machines in the photo are branded Tengu (天狗), the name of a local butcher and meat supplier. The name comes from the long-nosed “tengu” demons often associated with rural and forested regions. As such, I guess it conveys the image of cattle bred deep in the countryside of Japan where the air is fresh, the grass green, the rivers pristine.
Gero Onsen is a hot spring resort town, one of the “three great hot springs” of Japan. Shops close early, visitors walk around in the evening, and staffing small businesses can be difficult. A vending machine allows local producers to sell their produce after hours while keeping everything safely frozen. For tourists staying nearby, it also offers an convenient way to buy local meat without planning around shop hours - indeed, I suspect that most sales are impulse purchases!
So, did I buy any “Hidagyu” from the vending machine?
No, I didn’t, because that evening, the Mrs had booked us in for a “hidagyu” dinner for the second night in a row. Fond as I am of prime marbled Japanese beef, there is only so much of it that one can enjoyably consume even if it is the New Year’s holidays.
Mind you, later that evening I sallied out of our hotel room several times hit the vending machine on our corridor for more beer to keep me fuelled up for our evening session of "three player mahjong."
Cheers!
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[//]:# (!worldmappin 35.81002 lat 137.24105 long Buy frozen raw "wagyu" Hida beef, or pork or fried chicken (supplied by local butcher "Tengu") from these vending machines at Gero Onsen. d3scr)
I find this concept totally amazing! 😮 I guess Japan is so ahead of the times that one can even purchase these raw meat items from vending machines. I think it will take decades more before such a concept would exist here. 😅 Imagine the convenience of being able to buy raw meat any time of day. Thank you for sharing so many fascinating information about Japan. Enjoy your weekend!
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The funny thing is, Gero Onsen hasn't changed in the twenty years since I was last there, and it feels pretty much unchanged since the 1980s - except that the bubble economy has long gone. That's how I think of Gero Onsen, so it's funny to read your comment about something in Gero Onsen being "ahead of the times."
That clash of "old fashioned Japan" and "Japan ahead of the times" is not an uncommon experience in this country!
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I've blogged about this exact same vending machine before ;) It's an odd one, eh?
How funny! Did you buy any frozen beef? I didn't - I'd had more than enough Hidagyu at the hotel!
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Yep, I'm not at all surprised that raw meat is sold from vending machines in Japan, as I've seen versions that sell just about anything and everything. Japan seems to take vending machines to another level entirely. 😁🙏💚✨🤙
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By far the most common and all-pervasive vending machines are soft drink / beverage (hot and cold) machines, and then (my favourite) beer machines. I guess the frozen local beef vending machine appeals to passing tourists who might be tempted to buy frozen beef on impulse...
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!BBH
No doubt, and yes, I'm sure that you do enjoy the beer-vending machine...lol! It's an interesting idea, but I imagine that only people close to home, or headed home, would buy frozen meat from one of those vending machines, because who wants to walk around with a package of meat, as they go about their errands? 😁🙏💚✨🤙
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Interesting insight that I didn't know existed prior to reading this post! I think Japan does really push the boundaries of what possible and is ahead of the time. If given the opportunity, I'd try it out, obviously based on impulse and curiosity, to see how the process all works :)
I suspect most of the customers of those vending machines are impulse buyers and tourists. Those machines offer a nice combination of a unique "only in Japan" experience plus a good quality product that is a local speciality.
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And here I am… I used to be impressed just by the hot coffee options from their vending machine. Lol
Indeed! On days like today, those cans of hot coffee can be very cosy sources of warmth if you pop them inside your shirt!
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Japan never failed me always, their discovery are truely futuristic