Amsterdam - Japans Restaurant
Buiten Nederland - Sushibar
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Hooks Sushi (st. Petersburg)
Hook's Sushi Bar and Thai Food offers a relaxed casual environment where you can dine with friends and enjoy the pleasures of gourmet sushi without the gourmet prices.
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Sushi Furusato (Buenos Aires)
Sushi Furusato Delivery was born as an idea of the Trosman brothers: Eduardo and Norberto. The firm started to develop when its owners, lovers of Japanese food, brought to life a gastronomic enterprise with excellence, dedication and warmth as its main ingredients.
Den Haag - Japans Restaurant
Rotterdam - Japans Restaurant
Rotterdam - SUSHIBAR
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ICHIBAN Japanse Traiteur,nieuw
Ichiban Japanse Traiteur - Ichiban bezorgd sushi en warme japanse gerechten aan huis. Sushibar is gevestigd aan het vasteland 62 in rotterdam. U bent welkom in onze sushibar.
Sushi Wanahaves
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Sushi Clock
JBox is a great website selling all sorts of crazy Japanese stuff that you can't get over here. If there's one thing the Japanese love it's their fake sushi made out of wax. Take that love of wax sushi to its natural conclusion and what you've got is, of course, a wall clock (it seems so obvious to us now).
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Sushi maker (Sushi Master)
Prepare sushi at home with the Sushi Master International Sushi Maker. With the Sushi Master, you can create professional quality sushi that even the greatest sushi chefs would admire.
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Sushi USB KeY
Combining two of the things that the Japanese love best: technology and food (they've got their priorities straight over there, oh yes) these USB memory keys from Solid Alliance (the same crazies who brought us the USB Duck keys) have got plastic sushi stuck to them. Maybe there's some sort of plastic sushi mountain over in Japan at the moment, because they seem to be slapping the stuff on everything at the moment
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Sushi-making Gadget
There are very few things in life that I love more than sushi. That magical combination of vinegary rice, raw fish, and wasabi, just sends my taste-buds singing. So imagine my delight when I found out about this crazy contraption, Sushi@Home, which makes devices to help you make sushi at home. The round device makes Nigiri, whereas the long oblong device makes Maki. The devices are fairly mechanical in nature; the Nigiri device just shapes the rice ball for you, and the Maki device allows for easy setup and rolling (it does mean you’ll get a square-ish Maki instead of a round one though). I don’t think making your own sushi is all that difficult in the first place if you have a bamboo mat and you know what you’re doing, but if you NEED proper measurements the Sushi@Home products might be for you. Both the Nigiri maker and the Maki roller go for $90 each, but if you get them together, they’ll go for $150.