When you arrive in Hita, a castle town in inland Oita Prefecture known for its preserved Edo-period streetscapes and river culture, you step into a side of Japanese food culture that goes beyond tasting. Rather than visiting a formal sushi counter, you head to a casual local restaurant where the setting is welcoming and the focus is on participation. Your guide introduces the session and ensures you understand what’s ahead.
The chef stands in front of you and walks through the fundamentals of nigiri sushi — how to handle the rice, shape each piece, and place the topping. You follow along, shaping the rice with your hands and assembling each piece of nigiri yourself. The guide translates and supports the flow of instruction, keeping the session accessible and interactive. Throughout the process, you direct questions to the chef and receive direct answers.
By the end of the session, you have shaped and assembled your own nigiri pieces, which you eat on the spot. You leave with a practical understanding of how nigiri is constructed — the pressure, the motion, the balance of rice and fish — drawn directly from a working sushi chef in Hita.