You arrive at a casual sushi restaurant in the Zao area of Miyagi Prefecture, a region known for its access to quality seafood from the Sanriku and Sendai Bay coastlines. As you settle in, your guide introduces the session and explains how the experience will unfold, connecting you to the chef and setting the tone for an interactive, hands-on class rooted in everyday Japanese sushi culture rather than formal fine dining.
The chef demonstrates nigiri technique directly in front of you, walking through each step before you try it yourself. You shape the rice, position the fish, and press each piece using the same method shown by the chef. Your guide translates and relays questions between you and the chef, so you can ask about rice seasoning, fish selection, or hand pressure at any point during the session. The pace allows you to repeat and refine each step as you go.
By the end of the session, you have shaped a set of nigiri pieces using proper technique guided by a working sushi chef. You eat what you have made, finishing the experience with a direct result of your own hands. The knowledge of how rice is formed, how fish is placed, and how pressure affects the final shape stays with you as a practical skill built during the session.