Things in Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture just feel big. The city isnât nearly as jam-packed as in Tokyo, but the automotive townâs streets are wide and expansive (thank Toyota for that!). And the numerous cafes serve up generous portions that are known as âNagoya sizedâ (ćć€ć±ă”ă€ăș).
But this sushi isnât Nagoya sized. Itâs utterly insane.
In the nearby Aichi Prefecture city of Anjo, sushi restaurant Umewaka is famous for its jumbo-sized sushi. Thereâs the restaurantâs large-sized anago (conger eel) sushi that doesnât use slices of eelâit uses several whole fillets. This âastonishing anagoâ is priced at „2,620 (US$33), according to Eatravel Blog
The huge sushi insanity doesnât stop there. Thereâs also a âhuge sushi rollâ that, as Japan Sugoi points out, is stuffed with twenty types of raw seafood and rolled up in a two-meter bed of rice and seaweed. The whole thing weighs nearly six kilograms.
Those interested in the huge sushi roll must reserve it two days in advanceâand shell out „15,000 ($190).
Because of these ridiculously large servings, Umewaka has appeared on Japanese television several times, so the entire nation can stare at their TV and go, âWhat theâŠâ
Within the last decade, bonkers-sized food has become increasingly popular in Japan. While Japanese portions have gotten larger when compared to the past and while waistlines have stretched, Japanese portions are still smaller than their American counterparts.
In Japanese food culture, you are expected to clean your plate, and not be wasteful, which makes eating these huge portions difficult. Thereâs a stunt aspect to some of the jumbo-sized meals, such as the recently launched big burger deal at Lotteria as well as the Mega Mac McDonaldâs burger a few years back.
https://lastchance.cc/these-burgers-arent-just-huge-theyve-got-puns-5948511%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Umewakaâs ginormous rolled sushi (above, image courtesy of Tabelog) would most likely be shared with others, but I can see someone trying to tackle the astonishing anago alone, out of sheer gastro gall.
Still, American sized (ăąăĄăȘă«ăłă”ă€ăș) is still the benchmark for big in Japanâexcept for sushi, where âNagoya sizedâ rules.
(Top photo: Eatravel Blog)
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