CK Go Places Search Engine

Sunday, 6 May 2012

Feasting with Sushi

When I was in Japan about four years ago, I was looking very hard for an eat-all-you-can sushi restaurant. Finally, with the aid of web searching, my friend finally found one in downtown Tokyo and we planned for a lunch trip there.


We had to plan for the trip as Tokyo is one hour away by train, so we had to depart one hour before our planned lunch time. You heard me right! We went down to Tokyo purposely just to have this meal. Luckily there were not that many people and we could still find a table. Frankly speaking, eat-all-you-can meal is not that popular amongst Japanese.


We first ordered something that looked good on the menu to sample the taste. Therefore, we had only two for each type.


The tuna hand rolls looked good and we had only one for each of us. We wanted to taste more variety, so we ordered small quantity for each type.


Our second 'sample' plate was with unagi (eel) sushi and some seashell sushi. We knew that the unagi would taste good, so we ordered more even though that was still our sampling round.





Once we knew what was good from the sampling rounds, we started to make 'bulk' order of our favourites. Just by looking at the amount of unagi sushi, you know which was our ultimate favourite.


Uni (sea urchin) is quite an expensive food in Japan but I was surprised to see it on the eat-all-you-can menu.


We had some sushi with kimchi also just to have more variety in taste and also to clear our mouth from the seafood smell.


The content of our fourth plate of sushi was purely unagi! This was the day in my life that I had the most unagi sushi.


For the final round, we ordered one different type again, which is the sushi with tamago (egg). You can see that we had never left out the unagi! We also had more of the seashells.





To cap it off, each of us had one fried-beancurd-pouch inari sushi. We were all too full with sushi after gobbling up this 'pouch' of rice.


All the rice in the sushi we ate was shaped using a machine. Traditionally, nigiri sushi was supposed to be shaped by hand, but with the price of ¥1050 per person for an eat-all-you-can sushi meal, I couldn't complain too much.


4 comments:

Nate @ House of Annie said...

Just a thousand yen per person for all you can eat sushi?! Dang, that's a great deal.

CK Ng said...

Yes, it was a great deal indeed.

Marlene Lo said...

Waaa japan 4 years ago loh

CK Ng said...

Yes, it is already four years!

Recent Posts

Powered by Blogger Widgets

Recent Comments

Powered by Blogger Widgets