You arrive at a casual sushi restaurant in Kinosaki Onsen, a historic hot spring town in Hyogo Prefecture known for its traditional streetscapes and local seafood culture. This is where your sushi making session begins — stepping into a working restaurant environment where a professional sushi chef is ready to guide you through the craft. The setting is relaxed and welcoming, designed for hands-on participation rather than formal dining.
The chef demonstrates nigiri technique directly in front of you, and you follow along, shaping rice and placing toppings to form your own pieces of sushi. A guide is present throughout, translating and facilitating so you can ask the chef questions as the session progresses. You work through the steps at a comfortable pace, repeating and refining your technique with the chef’s guidance alongside you.
By the end of the 90-minute session, you have shaped your own nigiri pieces and eaten what you made. The chef’s direct feedback gives you a clearer understanding of the balance, pressure, and timing that go into each piece. You leave with a practical grasp of a skill rooted in Japanese culinary tradition, having made something with your own hands in a real Kinosaki restaurant.