You arrive at a casual sushi restaurant in Fuji City, a base town set against the backdrop of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture. The area sits within one of Japan’s most recognised seafood regions, and the restaurant you visit reflects the everyday sushi culture locals actually enjoy — not the formal, high-end omakase style, but the kind of approachable, hands-on setting where real technique is still taken seriously.
The session opens with the chef demonstrating core sushi techniques in front of you, walking through the fundamentals of rice handling, fish preparation, and shaping before you step in yourself. You shape nigiri by hand, assemble rolls, and work through each step at your own pace. A bilingual guide is present throughout, translating the chef’s instructions and passing your questions directly back to the chef so nothing gets lost between languages.
By the end of the 90-minute session, you have a completed plate of sushi that you shaped yourself — nigiri pressed by your own hands, rolls you assembled from start to finish. You sit down and eat what you made, finishing the experience with a direct, edible result of the techniques you practised. It is a grounded, skill-focused session that connects you to one of Japan’s most recognised culinary traditions in a setting that feels genuinely local.