Arrive in Ginza, a district long associated with craftsmanship and refined taste, and step into a casual sushi restaurant where the atmosphere is welcoming rather than formal. This setting makes the experience accessible without sacrificing authenticity — you are in a working restaurant, surrounded by the tools and ingredients that define Japanese sushi culture. A bilingual guide greets you and walks you through what the session will cover before the chef takes the floor.
Watch as the chef demonstrates nigiri technique directly in front of you, showing how rice is shaped, fish is placed, and rolls are formed with practised precision. Then, replicate each step yourself, working with the same ingredients the chef uses. Your guide is present throughout to translate instructions, clarify technique, and relay any questions you direct at the chef — making the exchange between you and the professional feel direct and personal.
By the end of the 90-minute session, you have shaped your own nigiri and rolls, which you sit down to eat. The pieces you assemble are yours to taste and evaluate against what the chef produced — a concrete measure of what you practised. Leave with a working understanding of sushi construction rooted in first-hand technique rather than observation alone.