Item Description
2012.1.4 Initially, Japanese trade partners instituted restrictions on all food imported from Japanese prefectures affected by the disaster. Taking its cue from Japan, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has slowly eased those restrictions, eliminating Gunma, Chiba, and Saitama from the list of banned prefectures. A look at recent FDA directives reveals the challenges Japan faces, with foods from affected regions—meat, mushrooms, tea leaves, yuzu, and more—being added to and taken off the expo
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Layer Type
Archive
Seeds
Geolocation
37.7608337, 140.4747282
Latitude
37.7608337
Longitude
140.4747282
Location
37.7608337,140.4747282
Media Creator Username
KH
Media Creator Realname
KH
Frequency
Archive Once
Scope
One Page
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Japanese Title
Fukushima Fallout p2 : Food + Cooking : gourmet.com
Japanese Description
2012.1.4 Initially, Japanese trade partners instituted restrictions on all food imported from Japanese prefectures affected by the disaster. Taking its cue from Japan, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has slowly eased those restrictions, eliminating Gunma, Chiba, and Saitama from the list of banned prefectures. A look at recent FDA directives reveals the challenges Japan faces, with foods from affected regions—meat, mushrooms, tea leaves, yuzu, and more—being added to and taken off the expo
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frequency | Once | scope | Page | email |
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URI
http://wayback.archive-it.org/2438/20110301000000/http://www.gourmet.com/food/gourmetlive/2012/010412/fukushima-fallout?currentPage=2
Attribution URI
http://www.gourmet.com/food/gourmetlive/2012/010412/fukushima-fallout?currentPage=2