New York-style steakhouses are now looking at Japan for expansion

The reasons are myriad, ranging from restrictions on US beef imports to Japan's economic recovery, as well as anticipation of the 2020 Olympics

Bloomberg 

steakhouses , New york steakhouses, Tokyo steakhouses, beef sandwiches,
The reasons are myriad, ranging from restrictions on US beef imports, which didn’t ease until 2013, to Japan’s economic recovery, as well as anticipation of the 2020 Olympics. (Photo: Reuters)

America is in the midst of an increasingly intense love affair with Japanese beef. Witness Don Wagyu, the new shop in downtown New York devoted exclusively to Japanese that start at $28. The counter sells around 150 a day, including an average of eight $180 Ozaki “sandos.”

But while Japanese diners have enthusiastically embraced Shake Shack, which has grown to nine locations since the first opened in 2015, American have been slower to establish themselves. Chains such as Ruth Chris have been in Japan for over a decade; but the New York-style experience, with pricier cuts of meat and a buzzy, familiar environment, have been slower to establish themselves. Wolfgang’s arrived in 2014, and and Empire Steak House just last year.

The reasons are myriad, ranging from restrictions on US beef imports, which didn’t ease until 2013, to Japan’s economic recovery, as well as anticipation of the 2020 Olympics. The Japanese have also developed a big taste for dry-aged beef, a major change from the fatty, soft beef they’re accustomed to. Imports of American beef rose 26.6 percent in 2017 through November, according to Bloomberg.

Enter Luger

In July, the legendary, Brooklyn-based Peter Luger Steak House announced it would open in Tokyo by 2020. It’s only the third location of the frenetic hall, which opened in Brooklyn in 1887 and has a Long Island outpost that dates back to 1960.

“The Olympics doesn’t hurt,” says Luger co-owner Daniel Turtel. “It will be good for our expansion, however long that takes, maybe another 60 years.”

Turtel and co-owner David Berson teamed up with WonderTable, Ltd., the Tokyo-based restaurant operators who have helped bring such flagship properties as Union Square Tokyo. “WonderTable helps bring our brand to a Japanese clientele who has been coming to Luger consistently for last couple years,” says Turtel.

Beyond Tokyo

Meanwhile, New York steakhouse Benjamin sees potential outside Tokyo. It will be expanding from its Roppongi location, which opened in 2017, to another spot in Kyoto by the end of 2018, with yet another Tokyo location by 2020.

“We knew from our customers in New York that there was a big craving for American beef in Japan,” says co-owner Benjamin Prelvukaj. (His Midtown Manhattan customers include Japan’s prime minister, Shinzo Abe, along with Bill and Hillary Clinton and Kim Kardashian.) Prelvukaj sees Japan as an emerging market for his company, although it’s as costly to open a restaurant in Tokyo as in New York: from $3 to $5 million. The menu in Japan is the same as in the US, as is the best seller: porterhouse. One difference is his customer base. While he sees a similar mix of tourists and business people, “we’ve also seen a large number of local Japanese women; the leaner cuts of American steak appeal to them more than fatty Japanese beef.”

Benjamin’s Japanese partner is Oizumi Foods. Yuu Murakami of the Tokyo-based PR company K2M Inc. credits companies like it and WonderTable with helping promote the New York steakhouse trend. They “have enough capital strength to invest in new projects, and bring overseas brands to Japan,” she says.

First Published: Thu, August 16 2018. 21:20 IST