When you arrive in Ibusuki, a coastal town in southern Kagoshima Prefecture known for its proximity to Kinko Bay and local seafood culture, you step into a casual sushi restaurant listed on Tabelog. This is not a formal fine-dining setting — the atmosphere is relaxed and hands-on, designed to give you direct access to the craft of sushi-making in an approachable environment. Your guide introduces the session and helps orient you before the chef takes over.
The chef demonstrates nigiri-shaping and roll techniques directly in front of you, and you follow along, pressing, moulding, and assembling each piece yourself. Your guide translates instructions and relays your questions to the chef, so nothing gets lost between you and the person teaching you. You work through the steps at a pace that allows you to practice each technique before moving on, repeating the motions until the shape comes together in your hands.
By the end of the 90-minute session, you have shaped your own sushi pieces from scratch and eaten what you made. The Q&A format means you leave with answers to the specific questions you brought — about technique, ingredients, or the chef’s own approach — rather than a one-size-fits-all script. The sushi you plate and eat is the direct result of your own hands working through each step with the chef’s guidance.