You arrive at a casual local restaurant near the Kumano Kodo, the ancient pilgrimage trail that has drawn travellers through the Kii Peninsula for centuries. This corner of Wakayama Prefecture carries a deep connection to Japanese tradition, and the sushi-making session draws on that same spirit — rooted in local culture rather than tourist spectacle. Your guide meets you at the venue and introduces the session before the chef takes over.
Standing at the counter, you watch the sushi chef demonstrate nigiri technique up close, then step in to shape and press the rice yourself. You work through the hand movements required to form each piece, adjusting your grip and pressure as the chef observes and corrects. Your guide translates and relays questions between you and the chef, keeping the session interactive throughout the 90 minutes.
By the end of the session, you have shaped your own nigiri pieces and sit down to eat what you made. The chef’s direct instruction gives you a working understanding of the technique behind one of Japan’s most recognised dishes — not as a performance, but as a skill practised in a working restaurant kitchen in Wakayama.