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Omakase

3/11/2026

2 Comments

 
Omakase does not mean sushi. It means that you place your trust in  the chef to make all the choices that will create your meal. Omakase means “I leave it up to you.” While the idea is simple, the beauty of omakase lies in the decisions the chef makes along the way. Many people associate omakase with sushi, and while sushi restaurants often use this style of dining, the word itself does not mean sushi. Omakase describes a way of serving food in which the chef determines the progression of the meal. Depending on the restaurant, an omakase dinner might include raw seafood, cooked dishes, broths, vegetables, grilled preparations, or rice courses. 
At its heart, omakase is not just a menu format but a way of cooking and hosting. It reflects a moment of trust between the guest and the kitchen.
The chef chooses not only what ingredients to serve, but how the evening unfolds. The order of the dishes matters. A light, delicate course might be followed by something warmer or more savory, allowing flavors and textures to move naturally from one moment to the next. Allowing dishes to be incomplete and part of a larger story.
Temperature, balance, and pacing all shape the experience. A chilled preparation may gently lead into a warm broth. A bright flavor might prepare the palate for something deeper or more aromatic. Each course is meant to connect to the next, creating a sense of flow rather than a series of separate dishes. Presentation is also an essential choice. The bowl or plate used for a dish frames the ingredient and often reflects the season, the color of the food, or the feeling the chef hopes to convey. In Japanese dining traditions, the vessel is considered part of the composition of the meal. Even the quantity of each dish is intentional. Some courses arrive as a single bite, while others linger a little longer. The overall balance of the meal is carefully considered so that guests feel satisfied. In this way, omakase becomes a quiet conversation between the chef and the guest. The chef responds to the season, the ingredients available, and the rhythm of the evening, shaping an experience that exists only in that moment. At Nodoguro, this spirit of omakase guides every tasting menu we serve. Each evening unfolds course by course, shaped by the seasons of the Pacific Northwest and the choices made in the kitchen that night.



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2 Comments
Kevin link
11/23/2020 06:08:03 pm

Thankk you for being you

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Stockton Gay Black Men link
5/17/2024 07:23:12 am

Thanks forr this blog post

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“Have I told you about it? About hunting wild boars in winter. There’s nothing much for them to eat, so they dig up yams. That’s all they eat. When you shoot a boar you immediately slit its belly and take its guts and grill them over an open fire. The intestines are full of yam. Yam sausages, you see? You grill them. And then slice them and eat them hot. Sound good? I would have loved to eat them with you.”
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