GEN SAKAMOTO -- WORKING
Story by Jennifer Kho; photos by Greg Fry
HE IS
Reaching people’s hearts through their stomachs
FROM CARS TO COD
While he cuts vegetables into thin, delicate slices and prepares
sauces and fish, Gen Sakamoto is easily the center of attention at Ooiso
Restaurant.
Sakamoto, who followed his girlfriend -- now his wife -- from Tokyo to
California in 1994, has been a sushi chef at the 20-year-old restaurant
for four years.
He has learned most of what he knows about sushi through his
experience at Ooiso.
That’s not surprising, considering he was formerly a car salesman.
“I knew a little about sushi before, because I liked to eat it in
Japan,” Sakamoto said. “But there are many, many rolls here that we don’t
have in Japan. The guy whose job I replaced taught me the basics, but I
also watched how other sushi chefs worked and stole from them. Mostly, I
learned on my own.”
Making sushi is harder than selling cars but also more rewarding, he
said.
“Sushi is definitely a very hard job,” Sakamoto said. “There is
nothing easy about it, and there is so much to do. But there is nothing I
miss about being a car salesman. Preparing sushi is a lot of fun. You can
taste it any time. And when I make delicious food and see that it makes
someone happy, that makes me happy too.”
CREATIVE CUTTING
The most difficult part of the job is using a knife, Sakamoto said.
“It’s tough to cut things just right,” he said. “I used to cut myself
many times, but I haven’t cut myself since last summer. Another hard part
is when we get too busy and I have to make the sushi very fast. I don’t
like that.”
Another difficult part -- but a fun one -- was learning the different
parts of the fishes, he said.
“Each part of each fish has a different taste,” Sakamoto said, adding
that he had to figure out which spices and garnishes matched the
different tastes. “Like chicken, where the breast and the legs taste
different. I got to taste them all.”
But one thing he likes about the job is the chance to be creative. He
gets to decorate the sushi in his preferred style: “simple, but nice.”
In October, Sakamoto even invented his own specialty roll: spicy
sesame tuna, which he said is slowly gaining popularity.
THE POPULAR AND THE UNIQUE
The most popular roll at Ooiso is the California roll, which is also
one of the easiest, Sakamoto said.
“It’s just some avocado, crab meat, cucumbers and fish eggs on top,”
he said.
Sakamoto said the more unusual rolls include the spider roll, which
features soft-shell crab, and the caterpillar roll, which consists of eel
with cucumber and avocado wrapped on the outside.
The caterpillar roll is among the most difficult to make because of
the difficulty in slicing avocados to the necessary thinness, he said.
The rainbow roll, with the California roll inside and different kinds
of fish on the outside to create a rainbow effect, was another challenge
to master, Sakamoto said.
His goal is to eventually open his own business in the future.
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