The art of crafting Japanâs most recognized food is being taught to students from around the world at sushi schools all over Japan.
"OK class, tell me how you would describe the taste of Kani Miso (Miso soup with crab meat) to a customer?" "Hmmm..." The class goes into a collective âNow Loadingâ screen. After maybe half a minute, a few peek out from under their thinking caps. "Salty and savory?â "Savory and a little sweet?" "Like regular miso, but with a crab taste!" Everyone including me, the teacher of this class, laughs uncontrollably. Just another day of lessons for nine students in the 20th session of Sushi Zanmaiâs Sushi Juku training course."...Now I have a skill I can use almost anywhere in the world to stay independent and give the people I encounter a taste of Japanese culture."
All nine students in the latest school session came together to show off their newfound skills in a test kitchen set up to be operated as a pop-up sushi restaurant. Us teachers along with other office staff and of course CEO Mr. Kimura played the part of customers. The students have different reasons for signing up to learn how to be sushi-slingers, and while they were hurriedly going about their last few tasks in the kitchen, they were kind enough to tell me their stories.
âIt was a bit tough but the training necessary,â says Teppei Kamitani about his performance during the graduation ceremony. The fresh-faced 24-year-old spends his time climbing mountains from the Himalayas to the Canadian Rockies, and has spent enough time outside of Japan to develop a near-native level command of English. âClimbing those mountains is my one true passion, but next to that is being able to give something to the people I encounter. Learning how to prepare sushi is part of that because now I have a skill I can use almost anywhere in the world to stay independent and give the people I encounter a taste of Japanese culture,â says Kamitani, referring to his end-game of going back to Canada as a sushi chef. âAfter traveling for some time experiencing all these other places, I came to dislike my own [Japanese] culture somehow because I didnât see how we contribute to the world. But now I feel a little different and believe this is the way I can show part of my culture and history when I return overseas.â