Discover Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/en/interviews/clips/1148/

Japanese Culture and the crafting Sushi in the States (Japanese)

(Japanese) It’s weird. I can’t really explain it but, when I’m in America, I feel like ‘I’m Japanese!’ This private, sort of pride of being Japanese grows in me. Especially when I was in Connecticut for 18 years, I kept on thinking, ‘I’m Japanese so I have to behave like a Japanese person.’ Through the restaurant, I wanted my American customers to get to know Japanese culture, or I guess tradition. And this hasn’t changed when I moved back here. Or when I opened this restaurant. Many elderly Nikkei come here and order grilled fish, chirashi (type of sushi with a variety of ingredients sprinkled on the rice) and various bentos, and I always feel like I want them to enjoy the traditional tastes. This is why I do this business. And recently, I think some have begun to understand what I’m trying to do, and it really feels good.

You hear about fusion food, and this and that these days in America, and I’m not against it. But I think it’s the origins of food that are important. Origins such as kombu shime zuke (fish rapped in seaweed) and oshizushi (rectangular pressed-sushi) in the Kansai region. There is 100 years of Japanese sushi history. It started in a time when there were no refrigerators or ice. When I talk about this history to American customers as I serve sushi, they respond with a “oh, interesting” and seem to enjoy the food more.


food generations identity immigrants immigration Issei Japan migration traditions

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)

Oi,Celia
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Oi,Celia

Brazilian of Japanese descents (Portuguese)

Former Director, Museu Histórico da Imigração Japonesa no Brasil

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Changing life styles of successive generations (Portuguese)

Former Director, Museu Histórico da Imigração Japonesa no Brasil

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A story about his mother

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Influence as a youth

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