High-end rebrand makes life sweet for Japan's 'ice farmers'

This picture taken on 10 January 2019 shows blocks of natural ice being moved on a bamboo rail after being cut from an open-air pool at a factory in Nikko, Tochigi prefecture. Photo: AFP
This picture taken on 10 January 2019 shows blocks of natural ice being moved on a bamboo rail after being cut from an open-air pool at a factory in Nikko, Tochigi prefecture. Photo: AFP

In a mountainous area north of Tokyo, a priest blows a conch shell as Yuichiro Yamamoto bows and thanks the nature gods for this year's "good harvest": natural ice.

Yamamoto is one of Japan's few remaining "ice farmers", eschewing the ease of refrigeration for open-air pools to create a product that is sold to high-end shaved ice shops in trendy Tokyo districts.

His trade had all but disappeared in recent decades, and the shaved ice or kakigori that is popular throughout Japan in summer had been produced with cheap machine-made ice.

But reinventing natural-made ice as a high-end artisanal product has helped revive the sector and save his firm.

"When I started making natural ice, I wondered how I should market it. I thought I needed to transform kakigori," Yamamoto tells AFP at his ice-making field in the town of Nikko, north of Tokyo.

This picture taken on 10 January 2019 shows a worker sliding a block of natural ice on a bamboo rail after it was cut from an open-air pool at a factory in Nikko, Tochigi prefecture. Photo: AFP
This picture taken on 10 January 2019 shows a worker sliding a block of natural ice on a bamboo rail after it was cut from an open-air pool at a factory in Nikko, Tochigi prefecture. Photo: AFP

Yamamoto took over a traditional ice-making business 13 years ago in Nikko, where he also runs a leisure park.

At the time, shaved ice cost just 200 yen ($2) in the local area and Yamamoto, who was fascinated by traditional ice-making, knew he couldn't make ends meet.

"My predecessor used to sell ice at the same price as the fridge-made one, which can be manufactured easily anytime throughout the year," the 68-year-old says.

The situation made it "impossible" to compete he explains, as producing natural ice is labour intensive.

Instead he decided to transform cheap kakigori into a luxury dessert, made with his natural ice and high-grade fruit puree rather than artificially flavoured syrup.

After months of research, he began producing his own small batches of artisanal kakigori.

his picture taken on 10 January 2019 shows an itinerant Buddhist monk blowing a conch shell for a `good harvest` of natural ice at a factory in Nikko, Tochigi prefecture. Photo: AFP
his picture taken on 10 January 2019 shows an itinerant Buddhist monk blowing a conch shell for a `good harvest` of natural ice at a factory in Nikko, Tochigi prefecture. Photo: AFP

 A gruelling process 
"I put the price tag at 800 yen for a bowl of kakigori. I also priced the ice at 9,000 yen per case, which is six times more than my predecessor," he says.

At first, there were days he threw away tonnes of ice because he could not find clients.

But one day buyers from the prestigious Mitsukoshi department store discovered his product, and began stocking it, turning around his fortunes.

Kakigori dates back to the Heian Period (794-1185) when aristocratic court culture flourished in the then-capital of Kyoto.

It was a rare delicacy reserved for the rich, with the ice naturally made and stored in mountainside holes covered with silver sheets.

It was only after 1883, when the first ice-making factory was built in Tokyo, that ordinary people could taste the dessert.

With the development of ice-making machines, the number of traditional ice makers dropped to fewer than 10 nationwide.

The story is one familiar to many traditional Japanese crafts and foodstuffs -- with expensive and labour-intensive products losing ground as cheaper, machine-driven versions become available.

And making ice naturally is a gruelling task.

The season begins in the autumn when workers prepare a swimming-pool-like pit by cultivating the soil and pouring in spring water.

Thin frozen initial layers are scraped away along with dirt and fallen leaves.

The ice-making begins in earnest in the winter, when water is poured in to freeze solid, but it must be carefully protected. Producers regularly scrape off snow that can slow the freezing process.

"I once spent 16 hours non-stop removing snow," Yamamoto recalls.

his picture taken on 10 January 2019 shows a worker cutting blocks of natural ice from an open-air pool at a factory in Nikko, Tochigi prefecture. Photo: AFP
his picture taken on 10 January 2019 shows a worker cutting blocks of natural ice from an open-air pool at a factory in Nikko, Tochigi prefecture. Photo: AFP

Cult product 
And rain too can ruin the product, causing cracks that mean the whole batch has to be discarded.

"I check the weather forecast 10 times a day," Yamamoto laughs.

Once the ice is 14 centimetres (5.5 inches) thick, which takes at least two weeks, workers begin cutting out rectangular blocks.

Each block, which weighs about 40 kilogrammes (88 pounds), is glided into an ice room filled with sawdust on a long bamboo slide.

The blocks are sold to some of Tokyo's high-end shaved ice shops as well as department stores.

In the Yanaka district, more than 1,000 people queue up every day for a taste of kakigori made with natural ice produced by another ice-maker from Nikko.

This picture taken on 21 June 2019 shows shop owner Koji Morinishi making a kakigori dessert with natural ice in the Yanaka district of Tokyo. Photo: AFP
This picture taken on 21 June 2019 shows shop owner Koji Morinishi making a kakigori dessert with natural ice in the Yanaka district of Tokyo. Photo: AFP

Owner Koji Morinishi says the naturally made ice has a texture that is different from machine-made products.

"It feels very different when you shave it. It's harder because it's frozen over a long period of time," explains Morinishi.

"It's easier to shave really thin if the ice is hard. If not hard, it dissolves too quickly."

Morinishi himself struggled when he first opened the kakigori shop, but has gradually built a cult following for his desserts topped with purees of mango, watermelon, peach or other fruit.

And Yamamoto's firm has seen demand soar -- he now harvests 160 tons a year and knows two new producers who have entered the market.

He says: "This business has become attractive and the ice makers are all busy."