Also offers “petite rice” options for those who aren’t ready to forego carbohydrates entirely.
As foodies and linguists are quick to point out, “sushi” doesn’t mean raw fish. The term actually refers to vinegared rice.
That said, the most popular and commonly eaten type of sushi, by far, pairs the rice with raw fish. As a matter of fact, nigiri sushi, in which a slice of fish is placed atop a block of rice, is so prevalent that there’s a second word in Japanese, shari, for the rice portion of a piece of nigiri sushi, which brings us to the new shari yasai sushi from popular revolving sushi chain Kurasushi.
From directly above, the shari yasai (yasai meaning “vegetable”) sushi looks like regular nigiri sushi. However, underneath the seafood morsel the rice has been replaced with daikon radish slices seasoned with sugar, salt, soy sauce, and yuzu kosho, a wasabi like citrus-flavored paste. Kurasushi will be offering two types of shari yasai: the bintoro (albacore tuna) seen above and boiled shrimp (both priced at 108 yen [US$0.98] per plate, as are all of Kurasushi’s sushi items).
Joining them in the shari yasai lineup are a pair of hand rolls, one with maguro (tuna) and the other with shrimp.
If the idea of no rice seems like sushi sacrilege, but yet you still want to limit your carb intake,Kurazushi will also be rolling out petite shari sushi, with half the rice of standard nigiri and topped with salmon or albacore.
In recent years, revolving sushi chains have been adding noodle dishes to their menus, and for the final part of its new reduced-carbohydrate lineup, Kurasushi has unveiled noodle-free ramen (399 yen), swapping bean sprouts and carrots for the noodles but keeping a traditional gyokai fish stock ramen broth.
All of the new items make their debut on August 31.
Related: Kurasushi location finder
Source, images: PR Wire
Follow Casey on Twitter, where he’ll have your rice if you’re not eating it.
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