Poll

Do you like sushi?

Yes.
9 (27.3%)
Yes, it's one of my favorite foods.
7 (21.2%)
Yes, it's my favorite food.
5 (15.2%)
No.
12 (36.4%)

Total Members Voted: 0

Author Topic: Do you like sushi?  (Read 12222 times)

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admin

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Do you like sushi?
« on: October 21, 2007, 01:48:00 AM »
I do.


Offline Ehud

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #1 on: October 21, 2007, 01:57:15 AM »
Yes, it's my favorite food.  Sometimes I fantasize about it during waking hours.  If I was to try to eat completely kosher I think Sushi would be my number one obstacle.  I don't eat it that much because it's expensive but whenever I do I pig out. 

My favorite sushi is pretty much any type of nigiri especially unagi, salmon, tuna. 

My favorite rolls are usually specialty rolls.  One of my favorite pieces of sushi I've ever had is a "rainbow roll" which is basically a California roll with slices of different fish put on top making it different colors on top hence why it's called a rainbow roll.  Also a good roll I've had is a California roll with alternate slices of unagi (fresh water eel) and avacodo with teriyaki sauce on top.  I also like tempura shrimp in my sushi.  Basically, I'm down to eat any sushi that's out there I love it all.  (I know it's extremely unkosher)
"The Jews will eventually have to face up to what you're dealing with here.  The arabs will never love you for what good you've brought them.  They don't know how to really love.  But hate!  Oh, G-d, can they hate!  And they have a deep, deep, deep resentment because you have jolted them from their delusions of grandeur and shown them for what they are-a decadent, savage people controlled by a religion that has stripped them of all human ambition . . . except for the few cruel enough and arrogant enough to command them as one commands a mob of sheep.  You are dealing with a mad society and you'd better learn how to control it."

-Excerpt from The Haj by Leon Uris

Offline Ehud

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #2 on: October 21, 2007, 02:08:14 AM »
Why not just eat kosher sushi?

Because there aren't any kosher sushi places where I live.  I suppose I could make my own but it's never as good as it is in the restaurant. 

Philadelphia rolls are very common in the U.S.  I've seen it on the menu at every sushi place I've ever been at here. 

I had a Philadelphia roll in Israel at a Sushi place owned and operated by Russians!  They actually had good sushi, not the variety that you find in the states but still good!
"The Jews will eventually have to face up to what you're dealing with here.  The arabs will never love you for what good you've brought them.  They don't know how to really love.  But hate!  Oh, G-d, can they hate!  And they have a deep, deep, deep resentment because you have jolted them from their delusions of grandeur and shown them for what they are-a decadent, savage people controlled by a religion that has stripped them of all human ambition . . . except for the few cruel enough and arrogant enough to command them as one commands a mob of sheep.  You are dealing with a mad society and you'd better learn how to control it."

-Excerpt from The Haj by Leon Uris

Kiwi

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #3 on: October 21, 2007, 05:25:21 AM »
Totally no! My friend eats it and she puts me off  :-\

Humans found out how to make fire for a reason  :(

Offline Tivole69

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #4 on: October 21, 2007, 07:31:20 AM »
There are some good sushi restranty  in Czech capitol of Prague. I have eat this, I like it.

Offline Ultra Requete

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #5 on: October 21, 2007, 09:05:55 AM »
NO! Raw fish is good for Golum not me. ;)
Jeremiah 8:11-17

11 They dress the wound of my people as though it were not serious. Peace, peace, they say, when there is no peace.

12 Are they ashamed of their loathsome conduct? No, they have no shame at all; they do not even know how to blush. So they will fall among the fallen; they will be brought down when they are punished, says the LORD.

13 'I will take away their harvest, declares the LORD. There will be no grapes on the vine. There will be no figs on the tree, and their leaves will wither. What I have given them will be taken from them.'

14 Why are we sitting here? Gather together! Let us flee to the fortified cities and perish there! For the LORD our God has doomed us to perish and given us poisoned water to drink, because we have sinned against him.

15 We hoped for peace but no good has come, for a time of healing but there was only terror.

16 The snorting of the enemy's horses is heard from Dan; at the neighing of their stallions the whole land trembles. They have come to devour the land and everything in it, the city and all who live there.

17 See, I will send venomous snakes among you, vipers that cannot be charmed, and they will bite you, declares the LORD.

Love your Enemy
And Heap Burning Coals on his Head!!!
http://net-burst.net/revenge/love_and_wrath_of_God.htm

Offline Daniel

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #6 on: October 21, 2007, 09:30:21 AM »
I like sushi. But I find that if that's the only thing I eat, then that doesn't satiate me. I then need to eat something else to get full. I love to eat it with wasabi and ginger, just gotta be carefull not to put too much wasabi on it or I'll burn out my tear ducts and sinuses.

Offline Dan

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #7 on: October 21, 2007, 09:54:18 AM »
I Like it very much!
I used to be disguised by eating raw fish and seaweed and other weird things... but when I weight the benefits of eating  healthy over the better tasting fastfood, it was NO contest. In mine mind I just forced myself to eat it and now it's been a couple of years and I love to go out and enjoy it!

kellymaureen

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #8 on: October 21, 2007, 12:27:47 PM »
No, I hate all seafood, Ive never actually eaten it but I just cant get past the smell and look :-\

Offline Lisa

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #9 on: October 21, 2007, 12:39:21 PM »
I LOVE it!  I could eat it every day!

Offline Sarah

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #10 on: October 21, 2007, 03:06:42 PM »
I find the sushi bites a bit too small. :)

Offline Dexter

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #11 on: October 21, 2007, 03:16:13 PM »
Never tasted it, and I don't think I would.
Not a foreign land we took and not with foreign possession but a land that belong to our ancestors that was occupied without a trial. And when we had the opportunity, we took our land back.
-Shimon Maccabee's answer to Antiochus VII Sidetes.

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Offline Sarah

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #12 on: October 21, 2007, 03:23:24 PM »
I LOVE it!  I could eat it every day!


Me too.



Yacov, you'd turn into a fish if you ate it everyday! :)

Offline Wayne Jude

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #13 on: October 21, 2007, 04:14:38 PM »
Love it!

Offline Merkava

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #14 on: October 21, 2007, 04:18:09 PM »
Tastes good but it can never fill me up  :-[
"We are in 1938, and Iran is Germany"


Offline White Israelite

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #15 on: October 21, 2007, 04:28:30 PM »
Yep, love sushi.

kellymaureen

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #16 on: October 21, 2007, 07:31:48 PM »
Quote
What about the vegetarian one

Hmmm never thought about the vegetarian one, I do love rice and vegetables, I suppose I could try that one as long as there isnt any mushrooms in it.

Offline Daniel

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #17 on: October 21, 2007, 09:37:01 PM »
I find the sushi bites a bit too small. :)

Hey, it's not the size that counts ;)

Offline Daniel

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #18 on: October 21, 2007, 09:37:28 PM »
I LOVE it!  I could eat it every day!


Me too.



Yacov, you'd turn into a fish if you ate it everyday! :)


How do you know he's not? ;)

kellymaureen

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #19 on: October 22, 2007, 05:17:58 AM »
Quote
Do you like Chinese food?

Yes I love it, I always order without mushrooms, telling them that I am allergic so they will be sure not to put them in ;)

Offline White Israelite

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #20 on: October 22, 2007, 10:48:05 AM »
never heard of sushi with mushrooms, sushi is Japanese though, not Chinese.

kellymaureen

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #21 on: October 22, 2007, 10:52:46 AM »
Im not sure whats in sushi, I just hate seafood, I know there is rice and veggies, Im going to try the vegetarian one

There is usually mushrooms in chinese food, and even if you say no mushrooms they still put them in...but if i tell them i will drop dead in their restaurant from eating one they tend to be careful not to add them lol guess dead diners arent good for business :laugh:

Offline Wayne Jude

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #22 on: October 22, 2007, 10:57:27 AM »
Its better than ya think girl!!!!!!!!!!!!! ;)

Offline White Israelite

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #23 on: October 22, 2007, 11:03:22 AM »
Im not sure whats in sushi, I just hate seafood, I know there is rice and veggies, Im going to try the vegetarian one

There is usually mushrooms in chinese food, and even if you say no mushrooms they still put them in...but if i tell them i will drop dead in their restaurant from eating one they tend to be careful not to add them lol guess dead diners arent good for business :laugh:

In Japanese cuisine, sushi (寿司, 鮨, 鮓, sushi?) is a food made of vinegared rice, usually topped with other ingredients including fish (cooked or uncooked) and vegetables. Sushi as an English word has come to refer to a complete dish with rice and toppings; this is the sense used in this article. The original word Japanese: 寿司 sushi, written in kanji, means "snack" and refers to the rice, but not fish or other toppings.[1] Outside of Japan, sushi is sometimes misunderstood to mean the raw fish by itself, or even any fresh raw-seafood dishes [2]. In Japan, sliced raw fish alone is called sashimi and is distinct from sushi.

There are various types of sushi: sushi served rolled inside nori (dried and pressed layer sheets of seaweed or alga) called makizushi (巻き) or rolls; sushi made with toppings laid with hand-formed clumps of rice called nigirizushi (にぎり); toppings stuffed into a small pouch of fried tofu called inarizushi; and toppings served scattered over a bowl of sushi rice called chirashi-zushi (ちらし).

Ingredients
Various nigiri sushi in an ice sculpture
Various nigiri sushi in an ice sculpture

All sushi has a base of specially prepared rice, and complemented with other ingredients.

[edit] Sushi rice

Sushi is made with white, short-grained, Japanese rice mixed with a dressing made of rice vinegar, sugar, salt, kombu, and occasionally sake. It is usually cooled to room temperature before being used for a filling in a sushi. In some fusion cuisine restaurants, short grain brown rice and wild rice are also used.

Sushi rice (sushi-meshi) is prepared with short-grain Japanese rice, which has a consistency that differs from long-grain strains such as India. The essential quality is its stickiness. Rice that is too sticky has a mushy texture; if not sticky enough, it feels dry. Freshly harvested rice (shinmai) typically has too much water, and requires extra time to drain the rice cooker after washing.

There are regional variations in sushi rice and, of course, individual chefs have their individual methods. Most of the variations are in the rice vinegar dressing: "the Tokyo version of the dressing commonly uses more salt; in Osaka, the dressing has more sugar".

Sushi rice generally must be used shortly after it is made. The Wiki Cookbook has a simple recipe for sushi.

[edit] Nori

The seaweed wrappers used in maki and temaki are called nori. Nori is an algae, traditionally cultivated into the harbors of Japan. Originally, algae was scraped from dock pilings, rolled out into sheets, and dried in the sun, in a process similar to making paper. Nori is toasted before being used in food.

Today, the commercial product is farmed, produced, toasted, packaged, and sold in standard-size sheets in about 18 cm by 21 cm (7 in by 8 in). Higher quality nori is thick, smooth, shiny, black, and has no holes.

Nori by itself is an edible snack and is available flavored with teriyaki sauce. The flavored variety, however, tends to be of lesser quality and is not suitable for sushi.

[edit] Omelette
Wikibooks
Wikibooks Cookbook has an article on
Inarizushi

When making fukusazushi, a paper-thin omelet may replace a sheet of nori as the wrapping. The omelet is traditionally made on a rectangular omelet pan (makiyakinabe), and used to form the pouch for the rice and fillings.

[edit] Toppings and fillings
Yaki Anago-Ippon-Nigiri (焼きアナゴ一本握り). A roasted and sweet sauced whole conger.
Yaki Anago-Ippon-Nigiri (焼きアナゴ一本握り). A roasted and sweet sauced whole conger.

    Main article: List of sushi and sashimi ingredients and styles

    * Fish

    For culinary, sanitary, and aesthetic reasons, fish eaten raw must be fresher and of higher quality than fish which is cooked.
    Professional sushi chefs are trained to recognize good fish. Important attributes include smells, color, and being free of obvious parasites that normal commercial inspection do not detect (many go undetected).
    Only ocean fish are used raw in sushi; freshwater fish are more likely to harbor parasites that are harmful to humans if uncooked.
    Commonly-used fish are tuna (akami, chutoro, shiro-maguro, toro), Japanese amberjack, also known as yellowtail (hamachi), snapper (kurodai), conger (hamo), mackerel (saba), salmon (sake), and eel (anago and unagi). The most valued sushi ingredient is toro, the fatty cut of tuna. This comes in a variety of ōtoro (often from the bluefin species of tuna) and chutoro, meaning middle toro, implying that it is halfway into the fattiness between toro and regular red tuna (akami).
    Aburi style refers to nigiri sushi where the fish is partially grilled (topside) and partially raw.

    * Seafood

    Other seafoods such as squid (ika), octopus (tako), shrimp (ebi and amaebi), clam (mirugai, aoyagi and akagi), fish roe (ikura, masago, kazunoko and tobiko), sea urchin (uni), crab (kani), and various kinds of shellfish (abalone, prawn, scallop, uni sea urchin) are the most popular seafoods in sushi. Oysters, however, are not typically put in sushi because the taste is not thought to go well with the rice. However, some sushi restaurants in New Orleans are known to have Fried Oyster Rolls and Crawfish rolls.

Ebifurai-Maki(エビフライ巻き). Fried-Shrimp Roll.
Ebifurai-Maki(エビフライ巻き). Fried-Shrimp Roll.

    * Vegetables

    Pickled daikon radish (takuan) in shinko maki, pickled vegetables (tsukemono), fermented soybeans (nattō) in nattō maki, avocado in California rolls, cucumber in kappa maki, asparagus, yam, tofu, pickled ume (umeboshi), gourd (kampyō), burdock (gobo), and sweet corn may be mixed with mayonnaise.

    * Red meat

    Beef, ham, spam, sausage, and horse meat are often lightly cooked.

    Note: It is a common misconception that in Hawaii, fried Spam is a popular local variation for sushi. In reality, Spam musubi differs from sushi in that its rice lacks the vinegar required to classify it. Spam musubi is correctly classified as onigiri.

    * Other fillings

    Eggs (in the form of slightly sweet, layered omelet called tamagoyaki), and raw quail eggs ride as a gunkan-maki topping.

Date-Maki (伊達巻). Futomaki wrapped with sweet-tamagoyaki.
Date-Maki (伊達巻). Futomaki wrapped with sweet-tamagoyaki.

[edit] Condiments

    * Shōyu

    The common name for soy sauce. In sushi restaurants, it may also be referred to as murasaki (lit. "purple").

    * Wasabi

    A piquant paste made from the grated root of the wasabi plant. Real wasabi (hon-wasabi) is Wasabi japonica. Hon-wasabi has anti-microbial properties and may reduce the risk of food poisoning.[11] The traditional grating tool for wasabi is a sharkskin grater or samegawa oroshi.

    An imitation wasabi (seiyo-wasabi), made from horseradish, mustard powder and dyed green are common. It is found at lower-end kaiten zushi restaurants, in bento box sushi and at most restaurants outside of Japan. If it is manufactured in Japan, it may be labelled "Japanese Horseradish".[12]

    In sushi restaurants, wasabi may be referred to as namida ("tears").

    * Gari

    Sweet, pickled ginger. Eaten to both cleanse the palate as well as to aid in the digestive process.

    * Ocha

    In Japan, green tea (ocha) is invariably served together with sushi. Better sushi restaurants often use a distinctive premium tea known as mecha. In sushi vocabulary, green tea is known as agari.

[edit] Nutritional information

The main ingredients of sushi, raw fish and rice are naturally low in fat (with the exception of some rolls and western style rolls), high in protein, carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals.[13] Specifically:

    * Fats: Most seafood are naturally low in fat; and what fat is found in them is generally rich in unsaturated fat Omega-3. Since sushi is often served raw, no fat is introduced in its preparation.

    * Proteins: Fish, tofu, seafood, egg, and many other sushi fillings contain high levels of protein.

    * Vitamins and Minerals: These are found in many of the vegetables used for sushi. For example, the gari and nori used to make sushi are both rich in nutrients. Other vegetables wrapped within the sushi also offer various degrees of nutritional value.

    * Carbohydrates: These are found in the rice and the vegetables.

On the other hand, some fish such as tuna can carry high levels of mercury and can be hazardous when consumed in large quantities.

Offline Sarah

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Re: Do you like sushi?
« Reply #24 on: October 22, 2007, 02:38:25 PM »
I find the sushi bites a bit too small. :)

Hey, it's not the size that counts ;)

When I eat, size matters.  ^-^

Though I guess, quality isn't quantity. Sushi just leaves you crazing for a bit more.