| Home@FlavorJ | Stereo/3D | Astronomic | Scenic/Art | Imagery | You're below: Other Stuff |
|---|
| I'm surprised at how many people haven't even tried sushi. The most common reaction is, "Ewww... raw fish!", and a common concern was best verbalized by my friend Brian when he said, "I just thought of it as an expensive way to acquire parasites".
If you go to dictionary.com, you find their definition says that it's a dish with either raw or cooked fish. In fact, there's no need to have fish at all. You can get beef in sushi, and there are vegetarian varieties as well. Sushi translates into English as "seasoned rice", and refers to the sweetish rice that can form the bite-size beds to present and hold your selection. Perhaps you're entertaining the idea of really trying this stuff. Now you're not sure what to order. Your friends and acquaintances have used strange words to describe their meals. You don't know what they're talking about, and the words are so foreign, that you never related those words to concepts, and you're back at Square One. I am hoping that this page will present the basics in such a way that you'll understand and remember, and enough information on some subtleties to make you feel really comfortable when you order and eat. After all, you won't enjoy your food if you're ill at ease. You may notice that not all of the descriptions have associated photos. As I go back and get more sushi, I'll image them and and fill in the little red squares. But I can only eat a certain amount at one sitting. This is still very much a page under construction, so if you have something to say, now would be a good time to comment. How are they crafted?Basic Ingredients and Materials Aside from the sushi rice itself, there are some ingredients and condiments that should be introduced.
Forms, shapes, sizes ... The sushi rice is usually kept in a tub conveniently right next to Chef, because this is the one place he must return to make any sushi dish. It's made very sticky, so that it can be shaped and molded into various forms to hold the toppings you order. These shapes and styles have names ...
There is another form, the Chirashi ("scattered") sushi, where the toppings are laid out on top of a bowl full of the sushi rice. Those toppings are usually forms of sashimi (raw fish), and may be why "sushi" and "raw fish" are equated as one and the same by neophytes. But that isn't finger food, pretty, or fun, so we'll ignore that on this page. |
| This text is a link to a table with pictures of many items common to most sushi bars, and descriptions of them. |
The answer to this depends on where we are at the time. For years, we lamented the lack of sushi in West Seattle. Then one day, Mashiko opened up. It's in the Alaska Junction, parking is fairly easy, and the quality is very good. They have a very artistic aquarium to enjoy, in case you have to wait at all. We're very happy that the place exists, but so too is the crowd that has grown. You just have to plan on which day to go. Fridays and Saturdays... it's crowded. If you go to their web site, you can download near real-time images (when the place is open) captured at the sushi bar, their menu, and links to some reviews.
We've also enjoyed Bush Garden, a place in the International District of Seattle. The prices are good, and so is the sushi.
We'd like to try Musashi, in the Wallingford section of Seattle, but we hear horror stories of very long waits. It's no wonder - their prices are apparently rock bottom, with little or no sacrifice to quality - just variety perhaps.
I've tried a few places in Olympia, and the quality varies there from "What's this stuff?" to "not bad". I hear tell (Nov 2002) that a new place has opened, and I'm eager to try it (I haven't had really bad sushi in Olympia yet).
But there is one place that we'll go out of our way for. Not only is the sushi primo, but Chef is one nice guy, the place is elegant, and Chef does art with fish heads. I mean, display art that goes on the counter tops, albeit not permanently despite the preservation (yes - "Ewwwww"). Miyoshi has been written up in many papers, and here's a review grabbed at random from a Google search on "Miyoshi" and "Bellingham".