Discover Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/clips/1149/

The Road to Success As a Sushi Chef (Japanese)

(Japanese) I was in New York for about 2 years, and the restaurant I worked at was truly an amazing sushi restaurant. It was…how should I put it, like a sushi school in those days. It was actually coincidence that I worked there. The place really polished up my sushi skills and by the time I was 27, I had been there for a year and a half, learning various techniques from my senpai (seniors at work). I was certainly lucky to have had the chance of meeting such people.

When thinking of opening my own restaurant, I knew it would be hard unless I had somewhat of a name for myself. And coincidently there was a sushi contest going on with two events; a sushi-making race and a sushi-crafting skill event. I jumped in and found myself in 1st place. The TV and newspaper publicity helped to have everyone remember me, and it’s helped me ever since. Even this location was coincidently bought from a friend who was retiring.

I love this location because I can go to the fish market every day. I go that day, buy something if its good, bring it back, and serve it to the customers, trying not to change the fresh taste of the fish. And I tell them that this is what really good sushi is. Recently, there have been more customers who exclaim, “Wow, this tastes like this? It’s really good.”


food Japanese food sushi United States

Date: September 10, 2009

Location: California, US

Interviewer: Izumi Tanaka

Contributed by: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum

Interviewee Bio

Born 1962 in Tokyo. Moved to America in 1981. Initially worked in a San Diego restaurant making sushi and helping in the kitchen. Moved to the East Coast in 1987 after receiving notice of a job opening in New York. He then moved to Connecticut in 1990 to support a friend opening a new restaurant. He became opened his own restaurant in 1997, and as his business grew, it became the top-rated restaurant in the New England area by ZAGAT. In 2006, he decided to return to Los Angeles for his wife in child, and started a sushi catering business while also working as a sushi chef for other restaurants. He has also taken the grand prize at several sushi competitions. In 2008 he opened “Toshi Sushi” in Little Tokyo. (December 2009)

Naganuma,Jimmy

First meal at Crystal City

(b. 1936) Japanese Peruvian incarcerated in Crystal City