Four Star Seafood

Grand Sushi/Sashimi Kit

$155

 A kit complete with everything needed to take your sushi game to the next level. Choose a full kit with everything from Miso to Wasabi or choose fish only for an unadorned raw fish meal.

*Please Note: Due to the worldwide shortage of Uni, we will be substituting East Coast Scallops. This is a temporary change until the supply has improved.*

Sashimi-Grade Seafood: 1lb Yellowfin Tuna, 1/2 East Coast Scallops, 1/2lb Ora King Salmon, 1/2lb Albacore, 1/2lb Hamachi, 2oz cured Salmon Roe

Miso Soup: 1gallon bag of bonito flakes, Aeden miso

Rice & Nori: 1lb Koshihikari short grain sushi rice, 1pk toasted gold label Nori sheets, White Shoyu, Rice Vinegar

Pickled Young Ginger and Grated Japanese Wasabi.

Comes with instructions for sushi rice, miso soup, & fish preparation.

Store your seafood in the coldest part of the refrigerator at 32 degrees for up to 3 days.
In the refrigerator we recommend removing the fillets from their packaging and wrapping them carefully in 2 layers of paper towels to absorb any moisture and firm the fish up for cooking and consuming.
If you don’t plan to consume the fish within 3 days, simply place in the freezer.
To thaw: place seafood in the refrigerator overnight.

It's a very good question! In general, there is nothing regulatory that either makes something sushi-grade or not. We use our best judgement from being chefs to now being intimately connected to the seafood industry and also being a huge fan of sushi to determine whether or not something is sushi-grade. Some things help us make our decision.

  1. One might be how the fish was bled. If a fish is not bled properly, it won't be good for sushi. Not because it isn't fresh, but the blood imparts a flavor that is undesirable for raw seafood.
  2. Surprisingly, most of the fish used for sushi here is previously frozen for convenience. When served raw, the freezing doesn't affect the texture or flavor of the fish very much. However, we prefer tuna that hasn't been frozen.
  3. Generally, we will recommend something as sushi-grade if we personally know how long the fish has been out of water, how well it eats raw (some fish will never be sushi-grade, because it doesn't have a nice mouthfeel), and how it's been treated after it was caught

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