Yamanakako Village sits within the Fuji Five Lakes region at the base of Mount Fuji, and arriving here sets the tone for a grounded, local experience. You make your way to a casual, Tabelog-listed sushi or seafood restaurant in the village — not a high-end counter, but the kind of neighbourhood spot where working chefs take their craft seriously. The relaxed atmosphere makes the session accessible without sacrificing the quality of what you are about to learn.
Once inside, the restaurant’s sushi chef steps in front of you and begins demonstrating nigiri technique directly. You watch closely as the chef shapes vinegared rice, controls pressure and form, and places each topping with precision. Then it is your turn — you replicate each step, shaping rice portions by hand, stretching and pressing each piece, and assembling nigiri just as the chef showed you. A guide translates the chef’s instructions throughout, keeping the process clear and the pace steady.
By the end of the 90 minutes, you have produced a plate of nigiri sushi made entirely by your own hands. The Q&A portion lets you direct specific questions to the chef — about technique, ingredient selection, or anything that came up during the session. You sit down and eat the sushi you shaped, finishing the class with a direct and edible result of the skills you practised.