When you arrive in Maebashi, the capital city of Gunma Prefecture, you step into a side of Japan that sits well away from the tourist trail. The city has its own food culture rooted in everyday life, and this experience brings you directly into it. You make your way to a casual sushi restaurant listed on Tabelog, where the setting reflects how locals actually eat — unpretentious, welcoming, and centred on good fish and skilled hands.
Once inside, a sushi chef takes you through the fundamentals of nigiri-making in real time. You watch the technique demonstrated up close, then put it into practice yourself — pressing, shaping, and forming each piece of rice and fish into nigiri. A guide is present throughout to bridge any language gap and keep the session moving. You work through the process at your own pace, adjusting your grip and technique based on direct feedback from the chef.
By the end of the 90 minutes, you have shaped your own plate of nigiri sushi using the same methods the chef uses daily. The Q&A portion gives you space to ask about ingredients, regional fish, or the finer points of technique before the session wraps up. You leave with a set of practical skills and a first-hand understanding of what goes into a craft that looks effortless but takes years to refine.