When you arrive at the restaurant in Yonago, you step into the kind of casual sushi setting that locals actually frequent. Yonago sits in western Tottori Prefecture, close to the San’in Coast, a stretch of shoreline known for its seafood. This context becomes immediately relevant as you settle in and prepare to work with the same ingredients a area sushi chef handles daily, rather than in a formal or tourist-facing environment.
The session begins as the sushi chef demonstrates nigiri technique directly in front of you. You watch the hand movements closely, then replicate them yourself — forming the rice, applying pressure, and placing each topping with guidance from both the chef and your bilingual guide. As questions come up, the guide relays them to the chef and brings the answers back to you, keeping the exchange practical and direct throughout the 90-minute session.
By the end of the session, you have pressed and assembled your own pieces of nigiri sushi. You eat what you have made, giving you a direct comparison between your results and the chef’s work. The experience leaves you with a hands-on understanding of rice shaping and topping placement — techniques you practised and repeated rather than simply observed.