When you arrive at the restaurant in Sado, you step into one of Japan’s most celebrated seafood destinations. Sado Island sits in the Sea of Japan off the Niigata coast, where cold currents and rich fishing grounds have shaped a deep local food culture. This setting gives the sushi-making session a grounded, regional character — you are not simply learning a technique, but connecting with the ingredients and traditions that define this part of Japan.
Once the session begins, a professional sushi chef demonstrates nigiri technique directly in front of you, showing you how to portion and press rice, position fish, and shape each piece by hand. Your guide is present throughout to bridge communication and relay your questions to the chef. You follow along, shaping each nigiri yourself and adjusting your grip and motion based on the chef’s feedback. The pace is hands-on and interactive from start to finish.
By the end of the 90-minute session, you leave with a plate of nigiri sushi you have shaped yourself — each piece a direct result of the technique you practised under the chef’s guidance. The Q&A format means you walk away with answers to the specific questions you brought with you, whether about rice preparation, fish selection, or the craft itself.