Sugarfish: Omakase Sushi Made in Los Angeles
Chef Kazunori Nozawa was the first to import the art of sushi to the City of Angels, specialising in omakase.
View this post on Instagram
Chef Kazunori Nozawa opened his first restaurant, Sushi Nozawa, in Studio City in 1987. The American clientele had to get used to his cuisine, rather than the other way round. The chef also had a reputation for being uncompromising on certain things: diners are forbidden from using phones during meals and are asked to avoid overly loud conversations.
An affordable experience
Since 2008, the new restaurants in the Sugarfish group (ten in total) have all respected the chef’s philosophy. There are just three options on the omakase menu, and there is no bar where diners can watch the masters at work, as the sushi is prepared in the kitchen. The prices aren’t staggering: it costs 16 euros for the first lunch menu, and 36 euros for the most expensive. Kazunori Nozawa therefore offers an affordable experience in his habitual manner: simply, and in his own way.
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
TRENDING
-
Shizuka Yokomizo, between Exhibitionism and Surveillance
'Dear Stranger' is the story of a troubling relationship between the photographer and the subject, who meet without seeing each other.
-
The Tattoos that Marked the Criminals of the Edo Period
Traditional tattoos were strong signifiers; murderers had head tattoos, while theft might result in an arm tattoo.
-
Hayao Miyazaki, the Man Who Adored Women
The renowned director places strong female characters at the heart of his work, characters who defy the clichés rife in animated films.
-
Queen's First Steps in Japan, by Koh Hasebe
The photographer captured on camera moments during the renowned British group's first visit to Japan, back in 1975.
-
The Analog Club, A Hub for Paris’s Film Photography Community
This hybrid space—part shop, part gallery, part darkroom—invites a more mindful approach to photography, rooted in the physicality of film.