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Sushi around the world, from California rolls and Philadelphia rolls to Italian su-sci with burrata, mortadella, olives and other Mediterranean ingredients

  • Chefs across the world freely play around with sushi, adding non-traditional ingredients and inventing twists and concoctions that make would purists recoil
  • The Japanese inventor of the California roll created the recipe in Canada, while Italians can find ingredients such as burrata, capers and olives in their sushi

Reading Time:5 minutes
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Sushi at Tojo’s Restaurant in Canada. While sushi chefs in Japan rarely take risks with recipes, people in the rest of the world are adding non-traditional ingredients to theirs. Photo: Leila Kwok

In Japan, the road to becoming a sushi chef is long and slow. Apprentices spend years doing small tasks for their master before they’re allowed to start making the shari (vinegared rice).

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Creativity behind the sushi counter is subtle, and aficionados will speak with reverence about a specific chef’s lineage – under which master he worked for and how long it took before he was allowed, with the master’s blessing, to set up his own sushi restaurant.

Outside Japan and a few other countries, though, almost anything goes.

Chefs across the world freely play around with sushi, adding non-traditional ingredients and inventing twists and wacky concoctions that make would purists recoil.

Hidekazu Tojo is the pioneer of “Western-style” sushi. Photo: Leila Kwok
Hidekazu Tojo is the pioneer of “Western-style” sushi. Photo: Leila Kwok
Cherry tomatoes, black truffles, Philadelphia cream cheese and Italian mozzarella are just a few of the ingredients used that show the infinite ways in which sushi is reinterpreted.
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Sushi master chef Hidekazu Tojo, head of Tojo’s Restaurant in Vancouver, is the pioneer of “Western-style” sushi. Soon after moving to Canada in 1971, he came up with the Tojo maki, commonly known as the California roll.

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