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Sushi
has a very interesting origin that has lasted for centuries
and continues to be a very popular food source today.
Sushi is made with a combination of shellfish, cooked
or raw fish, vegetables, and seasoned rice.
Although Sushi is most commonly linked to the
Japanese heritage, it actually began in China during the 7th
Century.
At that
time, any fish caught had to be preserved.
The only method possible was by fermentation.
Raw fish was cleaned, filleted, and then pressed
between layers of heavy salt and usually weighted down with
some type of stone. The
fish would remain this way for weeks at which the stone
would be removed and then replaced with some type of light
cover. The fish
would stay in the salt layers for a couple of months until
the fermentation process was complete.
Over time,
a discovery was made that by rolling the fish in rice that
had been soaked in vinegar the fish was fermented in a
matter of days rather than months.
The rice was then tossed out and the fish eaten.
However, with drought and a food shortage, the people
began consuming the rice as well as the fish and thus, Sushi
as we know it today was born.
However, in
the 1800s, a very famous chef by the name of Yohei was
planning a large dinner party.
Finding that he had not set out enough fish to serve
his guests, he took a piece of fish from the freezer that
had not been fermented and decided to take his chances in
serving it. What
he found was that frozen fish actually retained their flavor
and any bacterium was killed.
From this discovery, Yohei created two styles of
Sushi – one called Edo, which began as “edomaezushi”
that translates to “in front of Edo” referencing
catching fish in front of the city of Edo, and the second,
Osaka, for the city.
Interestingly,
the merchants in the city of Osaka were known for making a
distinct type of Sushi that consisted of seasoned rice
blended with other ingredients and then formed in a variety
of decorative packages that people could eat.
In Tokyo, Japan, the sea was loaded with rich
shellfish and fish. It
was from this city that nigirizushi was created, which
consisted of taking a small piece of the fish and serving it
on a pad of the seasoned rice.
In fact, if you were to visit Japan today, you would
most likely be served the nigirizushi style of sushi.
Sushi has
taken the world by storm and today is a multi-billion dollar
industry. Since
1970, more than 5,000 Sushi restaurants have been opened in
America alone and just a few years ago, one annual sale of
seaweed reached $36 million.
The popularity of Sushi continues to rise in that
people are looking for healthy food that is quick and easy
to make.
According
to the Millennium Edition of the Guiness
Word Records, two Sushi records exist.
The first was established in January of 1992 in which
a 715-pound fin tuna was sold for more than $83,000 and used
to create 2,400 servings of Sushi for influential dinners at
a staggering $75 per serving.
The second record consisted of the creation of the
world’s longest Sushi roll.
It took more than 600 people to create a 3,279-foot
cucumber roll in October of 1997.
With such
incredible popularity as well as the health benefits of
eating Sushi, it is likely that this food will continue to
be a part of everyday life for many more centuries to come.
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