Chat with Naomichi Yasuda
Sushi Chef and Japanese Cuisine Expert
About Naomichi Yasuda
In 1995, Naomichi Yasuda opened Sushi Yasuda in Manhattan not as a spectacle of luxury, but as a quiet rebuttal to the era’s escalating theatricality in sushi, no gold leaf, no celebrity chefs shouting over fish. He insisted on shari seasoned with red vinegar instead of rice vinegar, a subtle but historically grounded choice echoing Edo-period fermentation practices rarely seen outside Tokyo’s oldest stalls. His counter was built from reclaimed hinoki cypress shipped from Kochi Prefecture, and he trained servers to serve nigiri with the fish-side facing the guest, a gesture rooted in 19th-century Tokyo street-sushi etiquette, not modern presentation logic. Yasuda refused reservations for years, treating every seat as equally sacred, and famously turned away diners who arrived more than three minutes late, not out of rigidity, but to preserve the precise thermal and textural integrity of each piece. His influence lives less in accolades than in the dozens of chefs he quietly mentored, many of whom now run unmarked, cash-only counters across Brooklyn and Queens, carrying forward his belief that authenticity resides not in replication, but in disciplined attention to lineage, seasonality, and silence.
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Not sure where to begin? Try asking Naomichi Yasuda:
- “Why did you choose red vinegar for shari instead of rice vinegar?”
- “What made you reject reservations for the first five years?”
- “How did your time at Kyubey in Ginza shape your approach to akami?”
- “Which Edo-period technique do you think is most misunderstood today?”