You arrive at a casual sushi or seafood restaurant in Izumo, a city in Shimane Prefecture on Japan’s San’in Coast. Izumo sits along the Sea of Japan and is known for its access to local seafood, making it a fitting setting to engage directly with sushi culture. As you settle in, a guide introduces the session and explains how the next 90 minutes will unfold alongside the chef.
The sushi chef demonstrates nigiri technique in front of you, breaking down each step of the hand-shaping process. You then replicate the method yourself — pressing, shaping, and placing each piece with guidance from the chef. When questions arise about technique, ingredients, or tradition, the guide conveys them directly to the chef so you receive clear, first-hand answers throughout the session.
By the end of the 90 minutes, you have a plate of nigiri that you shaped and assembled yourself. You sit down to eat the sushi you made, finishing the session with a direct, hands-on result from your own work. The combination of chef demonstration, guided instruction, and live Q&A gives you a grounded understanding of how nigiri is constructed.