When you arrive at the restaurant in Yamaguchi Prefecture, you step into a setting shaped by the region’s deep connection to the sea. Yamaguchi faces both the Sea of Japan and the Seto Inland Sea, giving the area a strong seafood culture that runs through its local dining scene. This context sets the stage as you settle in and prepare to engage directly with the craft behind one of Japan’s most recognised culinary traditions.
The session opens with the sushi chef demonstrating nigiri technique in front of you, walking through each step before you take over. You press, shape, and form the rice, then lay and secure the topping as the chef guides your hands through the process. Your guide translates and facilitates the exchange, so you can direct questions to the chef at any point and get answers in real time as the session progresses.
By the end of the 90-minute session, you have shaped a set of nigiri pieces with your own hands and eaten what you made. The result is a direct, physical product of the technique you practised — not a demonstration you watched, but sushi you formed yourself under the instruction of a working chef in a functioning local restaurant.