You arrive in Shirakawa-go, a historic village in Gifu Prefecture recognised as a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its traditional gassho-zukuri farmhouses. As you make your way to the restaurant, the setting gives immediate context to the experience ahead — this is not a tourist-facing cooking studio, but a working local sushi restaurant listed on Tabelog, Japan’s leading restaurant review platform. Your guide introduces the session and orients you before the chef takes over.
The chef demonstrates each technique in front of you, showing you how to press and shape rice, handle fish, and assemble both nigiri and rolls. You follow along step by step, working with the same ingredients used in the restaurant’s regular service. Your guide interprets throughout, so nothing gets lost between the chef’s instructions and your hands. When questions come up — about technique, ingredients, or Japanese food culture — you ask them directly and get answers in real time.
By the end of the 90-minute session, you have a completed plate of sushi shaped entirely by your own hands. You sit down and eat what you made, finishing the class the way a meal at any good sushi counter should end. The process of making, then tasting your own nigiri and rolls gives the session a clear and satisfying conclusion.