[English]
Can I become a sushi
chef in 1 day?
We all gotta eat and
we all gotta learn
new things sometimes.
Now chefs can spend their
entire career mastering the
intricate knife cuts, the
impeccable fish butchery,
and the perfectly seasoned
rice that makes sushi one
of the greatest cuisines
in the entire world.
And I am gonna try and
master it all in one day
with zero preparation.
It's going to go poorly, but I
do have an incredible teacher.
Everyone,
welcome chef Gon Lee
from Sushi Takeda.
You came prepared.
Show me what's inside there.
It better be the nuclear
codes or a bunch of cash.
Oh my wallets and keys.
Hi, my name is Gon Lee
from Sushi Taketa and
I've been making sushi
for about 15 years.
Today I'm gonna teach
Josh how to make sushi nigiri.
I've seen a couple of
his videos and I think
he is very funny guy and
knowledgeable and funny guy.
So for Josh's test, I've
be looking at his knife
skills and follow the
steps that I taught him.
This is my yanagi.
Pull it out.
Pull it out.
That Yanagi, and this
is my gyuto, which my
regular basis prep knife.
Yeah.
And this is my deba.
I cut fish with it.
And this is, uh, for
veggies, vegetables.
I cut veggies with it.
Now, chef, you've prepared a
series of challenges for me.
How confident are you
that someone with no
preparation and almost no
skill can pull these off?
Uh, be honestly.
Maybe 30% being
gen, being generous.
That's pretty good.
If I got 30%, I still would've
dropped outta college, but
you know, would've been
higher than some grades
that I got in classes.
So that's not too bad.
Yeah, not too bad.
Yeah.
I'm excited to
get to it though.
You ready?
Yeah, I'm ready.
Let's go.
Chef Gon.
I've brought my
personal pet fishes for you.
Thank you so much for
allowing us to cook with
them to honor their bodies.
Tell me about the first test today.
We're gonna make
a shasu, which is a
vinegar for sushi rice.
So we got the scale out here.
How much are you adding?
Let's do about 500 mil here.
Okay.
Is this the brand you
would typically use in a
high end sushi restaurant
like Sushi Takeda?
Um, not really.
We actually use a better.
This is the stuff in my house.
So we have 500
mil, uh, 500 mil.
Okay.
Which is, let's,
let's put 500 grams.
Salt.
Usually I put about 20%.
So 520%.
That's about a hundred grams.
Wow.
That's a lot more salt
than I would've thought.
Yeah, there's a lot
of seasoning goes in.
I've heard sushi chefs say
that people think of sushi
as the fish, but really
sushi is the rice?
Right, yes.
Rice.
That makes sense.
Rice is most important.
Have you ever had sushi
with really bad rice?
Oh, yes, many times.
Who made it the worst?
Call 'em out right now
in front of everybody.
No, I can't.
Is it seven 11?
Have you ever had the sushi?
They got the little
California rolls at seven 11.
Oh no, I never had it before.
You should try it.
It's the best sushi
I've ever had,
and I'm gonna put
sugar.
Sometimes it really
is inedible, man.
I've eaten a lot of those.
Lots of sugar in it.
About how much sugar?
About a hundred grams.
Okay.
I need to be remembering
this, like I stop
talking about seven 11.
Okay.
Okay.
So 500 grams, rice vinegar,
a hundred grams sugar,
a hundred gram of salt.
Actually, I put
50 grams of salt.
50 grams of salt.
A hundred grams of sugar.
Mm-hmm.
500 m. I'm remembering math.
Now we're breaking
down the fish.
This is really something
that I haven't done a lot of.
This looks like it gave
birth to those two, or
like this is the boss and
these are, its two minions
ready to do Its bidding.
Yeah, they're like
little cousins.
Little cousins.
Yeah.
This is the big cousin
that takes 'em out to
smoke weed in the back.
Uh, yeah.
Show me how you break these.
Let's cut this
beautiful Shimaji.
Actually, this is one
of my favorite fish.
Did you just turn...
its eyeball
so it was looking at you?
Kind of. That was the
coolest thing I've ever seen.
First, we'll
dehead it.
Okay.
On the head when we filet,
there's a rule always goes
from belly back, back, belly,
belly, back, back, belly.
Right.
This is like a PlayStation
two cheat code kind of.
Yeah.
Up down next.
Yeah.
So you get infinite weapons
in grand theft auto.
Right.
So we're gonna.
Give a little small line,
just cut very shallow.
So that knife can goes in.
Mm-hmm.
When, when the knife goes
in, you wanna find where
the bones are there,
so you wanna glide it.
Ta ta ta until your
knife hits the spine.
Okay.
And you turn it around.
That's small knife line.
Belly back.
Back belly.
Mm-hmm.
Right belly back, back.
Mm. Belly, back, belly.
We're gonna make a hit song
after this, and once I hit the
spine, change your angle to
up and then you want to cut
a little bit along the spine.
Okay.
Wanna put knives
through like this?
Uhhuh, grab a tail
and goes, boom.
Wow.
It's crazy 'cause you,
you're not seeing so much
of what you're cutting,
but the fact that you can
hear it and you can feel it
from doing it for so long.
Yeah.
Damn.
It's a beautiful filet.
Okay, now go the real
speed that you would
go in the restaurant.
Lemme see it.
Okay.
Okay.
Get this.
Really crunch those bones.
Don't be delicate.
Don't be scared.
Can't be scared of fish.
The fish is more
scared of you.
Oh, and one another side.
When you, um, cut all
the rib cages, uhhuh, you
wanna, uh, get the space
and get the angles up next,
angles up, and then you
wanna cut down the ribs.
Wow.
So you're really, you're not
trying to avoid the bone,
you're trying to really
cut through all that bone.
Right.
What do you do with this?
Throw it on the barbecue.
Yeah, we can.
Yeah.
Perfect.
Alright, Josh, so now
we’re gonna cure the fish.
I'm just gonna do
one, one filet.
Is that okay?
Yeah.
Yeah.
You can take the
other one home.
It's our gift.
Just do a little light salt.
You want just filter it.
Is this for texture
or flavor or both?
When you salt it inside,
the moisture comes out.
And then all the fishiness,
we can get rid of
the fishiness.
We just, just lightly and
then we just wait for
another 10 minutes.
Alright.
Beautiful Chef.
We have rice in a, in a, in
a, what do you call that?
Oh, you could, you could
make up anything right now
and I would believe you.
I'm blank right now.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Oh, Lily, you're in.
Chef Gon, you’re out.
You're in, in, she's
the master sushi chef.
Hungiri.
Yes.
Hungiri.
Yes.
It's just a wooden bowl that,
uh, we mix, uh, sushi rice in.
So rice cookers are just the
standard way to make rice.
And then you season it
up in the Hungiri.
Mm-hmm.
Yes.
That.
Show me how you do it.
Okay, so we have our hot
rice here, steaming hot rice.
I'm gonna, I'm
gonna pour vinegar.
You're just doing that to
disperse it evenly, right?
Yes.
Mm-hmm.
You want the rice to be
hot so it absorbs more.
Um, actually we're
evaporating the vinegar.
Ah, interesting.
So you really want
to use a hot rice?
When we mix the rice, we
call it, we're cutting
it’s kiri.
So we're actually gliding in
between the rice partially.
Little by little.
Make sure there's
no, uh, rice clumps.
Okay.
May I?
Oh please.
Yeah.
May I?
I've washed my
hands, I promise.
What do you think?
It's seasoned so much
more than you would expect
in, in a certain way.
Mm-hmm.
You know what I mean?
Like if I were making this at
home, I don't think I would've
ever had the confidence to
season it to that level.
Hmm.
But also thinking about the
best sushi that I've ever had.
That's the flavor, right?
In the restaurant.
Do you ever do this?
Nope.
Yeah.
Well that's probably good.
That's why I use the pro.
Next will be cleaning this.
This one is done with curing.
I usually spray it, but
just dust out all the rest.
The salt.
Mm. And that's equal parts?
Water and vinegar.
Water and vinegar, yes.
Is there any reason
for the vinegar or
just Just the taste?
I kill any bacteria sometimes.
That's how I clean myself too.
You don't have time
to take a shower.
You kind of just.
We paper towels and vinegar,
put it in the armpits.
Um, and um, I'm gonna
cut down the color.
Watch
and turn it around.
We'll just cut the ribcage.
And when you cutting
down the ribcage, um,
you don't want to saw it.
You wanna always
do a clean one.
Stroke by one stroke.
Okay.
This is clean.
Is that the bloodline that
you're cutting along, right?
Yeah, bloodline and uh, bones.
Gotcha.
Gotcha.
Okay, so now that, uh,
our fish is clean, I'm
gonna show you how to
make nigiri with this.
Okay.
Beautiful.
First, we're gonna
skin them.
Is there any trick
to doing that?
'cause you made that
look really easy.
Ah, yeah.
There's a little trick.
So when you diskin, the
diskin, the fish, your knife
angle is really important.
You wanna keep the angle
that when you sharpening the
knife, if you're sharpening
the knife flat, you want
to keep the knife flat
if you're putting 45
degrees or--
Oh, interesting.
And you've cut off like a
little chunk that you're
leaving as an anchor and then
using the towel anchor, right?
Yes.
Damn.
And since I have a one sided
blade, so I'm just gonna
keep it flat and just little
by little and you see this.
Nice.
Wow.
So what part are you
actually taking off?
Because it looks like
this is still some sort of
skin or like subcutaneous
something or other, right?
Uh, so there's a, a lot
of fishes have a fat on
their skin, so you wanna,
uh, keep the, this little
skin part.
Yeah.
Yeah.
On the meat, as you see,
if I scrape it, there's
a lot of fat coming out.
Oh yeah.
You can see the oil
almost exude from it.
Mm-hmm.
So you wanna keep that
fat nice on the skin.
You wanna cut little big
chunk, uh, on the tail
side because they have
a lot of fibers in it.
Okay.
So that's gonna be chewy.
So we just--
Are you
that throw in a soup?
Yeah.
You could throw the soup,
grill it or eat it for lunch.
Add it to the barbecue pot.
Yep.
Typical gritty size
is you want to put.
Two finger size, two finger
width, and two finger length.
Now, here's the
thing I've learned.
Not all finger
sizes are the same.
No, don't.
That wasn't dirty.
I was literally
talking about that.
What if you have a six
foot eight sushi chef,
got big old fingers, then
you make bigger sushi.
Make bigger sushi,
that's how it works.
You wanna use the whole
blade here from back, slide
that back towards you.
Mm-hmm.
So now that we have
the fish, cut it.
So let's move on
to making sushi.
So first step, let's
grade the wasabi.
Let's do it, please.
Now we have, now this
is the real stuff.
Yeah, this is a real,
real home wasabi.
Is this stuff expensive?
Pretty expensive.
Yes.
Some good ones are,
they go up to 50, 60
per pound.
Damn.
That's crazy.
Mm-hmm.
Do you ever use the fake
stuff in the restaurant and
lie to people?
Oh, I never
lied, but I have used this.
Is there any trick to this?
Or you just go in a circle?
Just go in a circle.
Yeah.
Did I make this up or is
it, is this traditionally
made out of shark skin?
Supposedly, yes.
Mm-hmm.
This one's not
made of shark skin.
Doesn't look like it.
But now there's a metal, one
metal grater, like different,
different types of it.
There's no substitute for
that real shark flavor.
That's what I'll say as
as a sushi chef myself.
So we have the wasabi here.
Beautiful.
We have rice and we have
tezu, which is just,
uh, water for your hand.
But tezu is not just
the name for water.
Tezu is simply water
for your hand, right?
Yeah.
Got you.
Te means hand,
zu means water.
So.
Hand water.
Hand water.
And then at the end
of the meal, you drink
that like a shot.
So you wanna lightly
just wet your hand.
Okay.
And we're gonna
grab the rice here.
And you want to
roll it around it?
Make a shape.
I'm, I'm mimicking, I'm
trying to, I'm trying
to get the motion down.
You're kind of here, right?
It's like you're rolling dice.
Mm-hmm.
Yes, exactly.
Close your eyes.
Bite your bottom lip,
and roll the dice.
Mm-hmm.
Grab a piece of fish.
Put wasabi, wasabi.
Put rice on it.
Mm-hmm.
With your thumb, you wanna
put a little hole in it.
Oh.
Because, uh, you wanna
put little pocket and you
wanna just press it down
a little bit Lightly.
Just divit, divit
with the thumb.
Mm-hmm.
Press it down lightly and
you want to turn it around.
And now you wanna
shape, turn, shape.
When you're sitting at
a sushi bar, it looks
so simple and natural.
'cause of course it is.
But watching you actually do
this up close and thinking
about myself having to
do it, it's a lot more
intricate of a hand movement.
Yes.
Actually there's a few
different types, uh, different
style of making sushi.
So one that I just did a
kotegaishi means, means,
uh, just you just flip
your wrist.
Mm-hmm.
And there's another,
which is same thing.
No.
Put this two finger, you
wanna kind of shape it
uhhuh, and then put a
whole divot and then you
just go, oh, on your hand.
And then shape chef,
the dish is done.
Almost just one more.
One more thing.
I wanna put soy sauce.
Beautiful.
So this way you
don't gotta dip it.
Mm-hmm.
But when I go to the all
you can eat sushi bar.
Mm. This is a negidama.
Just a simple green
onion and ginger.
This looks so good.
Alright, thank you.
Can we eat it?
Please do.
Go ahead.
Oh my.
Will you eat one with me?
Sure.
Do you eat with your
hands or chopsticks?
What do you eat?
I use hands.
My guy.
Oh, natural.
That will bear eat
salmon out of a river.
Hmm?
Gimme a hug, brother.
Hug.
Thank you.
Mine's not gonna
taste as good as that.
I just wanna make something
edible, and I think I can.
Though you've trained me
well, I feel good about this.
I hope so.
I have faith in you.
I feel very confident.
I have no formal training,
but Chef Gon, you're my boy.
And also I've watched
Jro Dreams of Sushi
about 37 times.
So let's do this.
Okay, we're gonna take.
Not the first thing we were
gonna do, man, you gotta make
the vinegar for the rice.
Dammit.
All right.
My hands are covered in fish,
but that's perfectly fine.
So he did this in
a 10 to one ratio.
I don't know how
to work the scale.
You gotta do the tornado spin.
This is how you chug
a beer the fastest.
You get the tornado going,
shove it right down the gult.
All right?
393 grams.
So now, no, no maths
times, everything.
Multiply it by 0.8.
So that means he
did do, dammit.
Did he do a hundred grams of
salt or, oh, come on, Josh.
Typically you would do
more sugar than salt.
He did salt first.
A hundred grams of
salt, 50 grams of sugar.
So we're gonna go
80 grams of salt.
40 grams of sugar.
That seems like so much salt.
Oh no.
Okay.
40 grams of sugar.
I feel like he did
the opposite now.
I'm so sorry, man.
No, you're doing right.
It's still gonna be,
it's gonna be good again.
If, if any of this is really
bad, we're gonna make soup
Chef Gon, I'm gonna make
you the best, the best chapino
you've ever had, brother.
We just need a chapino master
to teach me how to make it.
Okay.
Shimaji.
Boom.
This is where I'm
confident, okay.
We're using his knife.
We're gonna cut the
head off, follow the
line underneath that.
He did it.
He did it a lot
cleaner than I did.
But listen, I got a fish head.
Well, okay.
You know, big
mouth belly bash.
Nice job.
Never looked so good.
Oh yeah.
I forgot to spin the
eyeball towards me.
I Alright.
Belly.
That's right.
Back.
Back belly.
So what he did is he
ran his knife along.
I kind of, I kind
of don't do that.
Run it along the belly.
And now you wanna hear
like a ta ta ta ta ta
of the bones breaking.
I feel this spine.
I feel the spine
said the surgeon.
Okay, here's the thing.
He can't be gentle
with the fish.
He's already dead.
Okay.
Shallow cut.
Feel the spine,
seems like a storm.
Back to the belly.
Belly backpack.
I feel like I don't remember
what he did, but I know what
I want to do and I'm gonna do
what I want to do, which is as
long as I get your job done.
And I think that's
bone marrow.
Did you think he
went that way?
Mm-hmm.
Do I think he went that way?
Uh, that's a lot of
pressure for fish.
Shit.
Sorry.
That was a, just damnit.
Okay.
You know what?
No.
Hey, he said knife
angles important.
Where's the one?
Stroke Not, not saw your fish.
What the hell's
happening Here?
Let's flip it open.
So you're working
with, oh my God, no.
Wow.
Look at all the meat.
No.
No, come on, Josh.
Oh my God.
I want you to know that
I, I am trying my best.
I say that when people flip me
off in traffic all the time.
I just go, I'm, I'm really
trying my best with this.
I'm not trying to do bad.
I'm going backhand
on the flake.
'cause I feel like I
was doing something
pretty good beforehand.
Not the belly was supposed
to go belly back, back
belly knife angle down.
'cause I believe what
he was talking about.
Is that there is, there's
only an edge on this side,
so if I keep the knife
angle down like that, I
think I'll be able to use,
okay.
Oh, watch this.
Just, okay.
Watch your finger.
Oh.
Oh.
I'm scared to watch this.
Oops.
Slowly.
Okay.
Uh.
Shit.
Watching him here is
actually, this is a lot
more spinal cord than here.
More fun than I thought.
And it takes some of salt.
Give it a nice
little light cure.
Just a little bit of
sprinkle, sprinkle up
and then we're just gonna
flip it back on here.
Oh wow.
That's a lot of salt.
I don't remember how
much salt he put on it.
I wasn't watching.
I was trying to make jokes.
I was trying to make jokes.
This is my life.
So now that Oshimaji
has been expertly broken
down, what we're gonna,
what we're going to do
is we're gonna salt it
because that eliminates
some of the fish flavor.
And then also, yeah,
it, it season, you also
need to season your fish.
I gotta wa, I gotta wash
my hands and just go think.
I need to think,
Hey, first quarter is over
and we might be down by 20
points, but you know what?
We still got a lot
of spirit in us.
Let's just taste this
vinegar that now I'm
fully sure that I
messed up the ratios.
Ah, I need to
redo the vinegar.
I, let me think.
Just everybody stop
watching and let me think.
I need to make him
something edible.
There's definitely
supposed to be more sugar.
There's always more
sugar than salt.
And a recipe for anything.
200 is enough.
Multiplying by 0.4.
This is where you fudged
up last time, dude.
So a hundred times 0.4 40.
So 200 grams at, we're
gonna do 40 grams sugar.
Hate myself.
What?
Bring sugar.
And let's just go light
on the salt here, Josh.
20 grams of salt.
I just, I'm so scared now.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Okay, now fish.
Check this out.
Check this out.
Fish is cured.
This is my beauty filet.
Now.
It's also awful.
We're gonna dip this in
equal parts, vinegar, and
water, and we're just going
to gently wash the cure.
Oh, this makes me sad.
But now we're gonna go ahead
and we're gonna run our
knife along the bloodline
and then we're gonna skin it.
Uh, that is what I believe the
next step is, and that's just
what the hell I'm gonna do.
If anybody has any
problem with it, you
gotta take it up with me.
Why?
Why can't I just
even cut through?
There's so many bones here.
Clean.
There seems to be a
ton of bones clean.
The rib cage, we
have to skin it.
Chef Gon made it look
very easy, and I remember
this part very vividly.
I'll show you what he did.
This is my beauty guide.
This is where the nigiri
is gonna come from.
Okay.
So he kind of, he did
this, kept the skin sort
of attached, flipped
that, used it as an
anchor, grabbed the towel.
Bingo.
Bingo.
Yeah, he might want to use a
under knife 'cause uh, deba is
a little too thick for skinny.
It's pulling so far.
God damnit, I lost my anchor.
Okay, let's season
our rice, shall we?
Maybe,
Is that what, is that
what I'm supposed to do?
Now we're gonna take our rice.
I get that.
Ow, ow.
That's fine.
Ow, ow.
Gonna put some
rice into the hung.
Let's taste this guy.
Significantly better.
And then what?
What he did we're, we're
just eyeballing it here.
He kinda splashed it over
and he was kind of here and
then now he cut the rice so
gently, he took every little
grain kind of cut through it.
I'm gonna taste the rice and....
close.
Hear me out though.
I'm gonna add a little bit
of the gross vinegar 'cause
I under salted my vinegar.
Add a little bit to this guy.
I say he didn't have to
make, really make the new
vinegar 'cause it could be
really salty and strong.
Now feel like he
switched to this knife
earlier than I-- Anyways.
Now you wanna cut this
at an angle, which angle?
And he cut off a
solid snacking chunk.
He did one.
One strong clean gliding cut.
I feel good about this
now I just need a plate.
Am I missing a very
important step?
Putting mine on a black
plate to be the obvious
villain in the story?
This is the cowboy
wearing a black hat.
Come on, figure it out.
Nice and wet.
Let's do it.
Little ball of rice.
Little ball of rice
that that's way bigger.
But I have big fingers bigger.
The sushi chef, bigger
than the fingers.
The finger rice, he kinda
moved it around a lot.
There was a divot
at some point.
We're just gonna get this
into a ball and they're gonna
put like my thumb in there.
And then we're gonna
take a piece of fish
that, that fish is
just gonna go on there.
There was a, a flip chef
going, I'm sorry man.
And then you're doing it.
Okay.
Wasabi.
Huh?
I forgot the wasabi.
I forgot to grate the was.
I have to grate the wasabi.
I have to grate the wasabi.
Go ahead.
I could do this if I
worked in a sushi bar.
I could just be the
wasabi Great guy.
God.
God.
Okay.
Little bit of wasabi, a
little bit more, and then
I think I can just kind
of flip that guy back on.
Give it some love.
Smudge the plate up.
Good.
We brush a soy.
You ever fail at
something in your life?
You ever do it in front of
a lot of people watching?
A little bit of salt.
You didn't put a lot on there.
Little dollop of Tama.
Ah,
chef.
What we prepared for you today
is uh, nigiri of Shima Aji.
I'm so sorry.
Is chef going still here?
Yep.
Ah, dammit.
All right.
Now we're gonna have chef
going come in and taste it.
Sorry Chef.
I don't wanna look
you in the eyes.
I feel shame.
Oh, you did.
You did great.
You did good.
You did good on.
Get on, uh, belly.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Do you want to taste this?
Oh, sure, yes.
Does this look edibles?
It looks edible, yes.
Okay.
Which one?
Here, I'll let you
take the first pick.
Try compact.
Come pie.
So all the
ingredients are there.
So I taste the,
I taste the fish.
I taste the ity.
Uhhuh.
It tastes good, but just, um.
The fishes and wrapping
wise, yeah, I think that was
a no-no, there's a lot of
room for, but, uh, yeah, it
tastes, tastes, tastes good.
How's the seasoning
on the rice?
Also, I have two
different vinegars for
you to choose from.
One is bad.
The other's also bad.
No, actually, uh, I think
this, you might feel like
it's really strong, but once
she, once it mixed in the
rice, it'll actually, Hmm.
Yeah.
This is actually.
I pretty good.
Dang it.
I didn't trust myself.
What was my biggest
mistake with the fish?
'cause I had a lot
more trouble than
I thought I would.
You made it look too easy.
It's your fault.
So first you didn't go
belly, backpack, belly.
I saw you belly
back and belly back.
So that was the one
mistake you made.
You made it so easy for
me and I still messed up.
You're going sawing,
uhhuh the fish I saw.
Yeah.
Most of the time
you're sawing.
Yeah, you told me not to
saw and I saw it a lot.
Did I at least use the right
knives for the right tasks?
I see a scale.
Yeah, sorry.
Knife wise.
Uh, everything was good.
I mean, you could use your
knife as your, how, how,
how you comfortable you are.
I mean, as long as you
get your job done, it's,
and did I get my job done?
Oh, please, Jeff.
Feel free to touch anything.
Oh yeah.
Skin looks good.
If you were to give me a
grade, like in school mm-hmm.
What would you, what
grade would you give me?
Um, what's the.
How do I grade 30%?
My teachers told that, and
they called that an F minus.
F minus.
F minus.
That's probably, yeah,
that's, that's not bad.
I once got a negative
12% on a chemistry test.
That is true.
But the taste, I'll give 70.
That's pretty good, man.
Mm-hmm.
Just the, the process was.
Yeah.
Yeah, A little bit.
This is why in the restaurant
you hide me in the back.
Right.
You don't let the
customers see me.
Yeah.
You'll be washing dishes.
I great though.
I'll move up to grading
the wasabi after a year
of dish washing, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's always chance.
Uh, truly.
It was so awesome to
watch you at your craft.
You're obviously a master
chef Gon, you're the man.
Thank you so much, brother.
Thank you.
Everyone.
Check out Sushi Takeda.
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Yeah, please come,
Come to Sushi Takeda and
have have some sushi.
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