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2torial #0415:
Learn2
Make Sushi (continued)
Buy the fish
If you'll be using fish for your sushi, your
ultimate rule of thumb is to find the freshest
stuff possible. If you'll be making vegetarian
sushi, skip to Step 2.
The cooked and the raw. Some fish and
seafood used for sushi is always or usually served
raw; some is always or usually cooked. Popular raw
fish choices include yellowtail (called
"hamachi"), tuna (maguro or the
fattier toro), sea bass (suzuki),
halibut (hirame), and mackerel
(saba). Salmon (sake), crab
(kani), freshwater eel (unagi), and
octopus (tako) will nearly always be cooked
or cured (and salmon should always have been
deep-frozen at some point). Shrimp is served both
raw (ama ebi) and cooked (ebi). Fish
eggs, or roe--including herring (kazunoko),
flying fish (tobiko), and salmon
(ikura) roe--are usually salted or cured;
sea urchin roe (uni) is not.
Is it fresh? Use these guidelines to
ensure you're buying the best quality fish and
seafood you can find:
- Fresh fish should not smell strongly
fishy; it should be almost odorless, or have a
faint scent of the sea.
- The flesh should be firm and shiny with
no discoloration, and it should spring back when
you press it.
- You probably won't need a whole fish,
but if you're buying one, the eyes should be
clear, the scales shiny, and the gills clean and
bright red.
Your best bet. Japanese and some other
fish markets sell ultra-fresh "sashimi-grade"
fish, which is usually farmed in Japan or frozen
right on the fishing boat, then thawed under
refrigeration by the seller. It's not cheap, but
try to use this if you can find it.
For the beginner. The popular California
rolls, among others, are often made with
artificial crabmeat (surimi), which is
actually cooked whitefish made to look and taste
like crab. This is a low-cost ingredient that's
not intimidating to beginners. Other good
first-timer ingredients are avocado, cucumber,
tuna, omelet (see Step 4),
freshwater eel, and cooked, butterflied shrimp.

Step 2
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