Opened up a while back, Sushiro Sushi is a chain sushi conveyor belt-type restaurant popular in Japan. This is the XiMen branch.
This is the counter to pay your bill after you’ve finished eating, but you can also take out from here, too.The eagle-eyed among you may have noticed that the wait for a table at the time of the pic was 25 mins at around 17:30. But, when we left, it was over 1hr wait.
My recommendation? Book in advance using their online system/phone number. Alternatively, get there around 17:00/17:30 and prepare for a short wait.
All of their food booking service is done online using the tablet provided. You can choose from Chinese, English, Japanese, and Korean languages – happy days!Spread
Sitting next to the conveyor belt can be dangerous in terms of quickly racking up a quick bill, but it’s also a lot of fun and you definitely feel like a kid again.
Just keep in mind, that: Red = $40, Silver = $60, and Gold = $80, and you’ll be fine!
How good does this fatty tuna look? You can almost see the silky fat dripping off #droolThis mayonnaise smothered salmon with cheese went down well, too.Also a good option is the tuna rollThe premium Japanese eel went down a treatNo idea what these are but got them out of interest. I won’t get them again.
These were way too chewy and lacking in any flavour. I don’t recommend.
This was pretty good with a tempura shrimp running through the middle
Thumbs up from me.
Snow crab
I would quite happily order several of these. Really good.
Flame-scorched salmon here
*Alert* more drool
Octopus
Another I would say to give a miss. Why? It’s more about texture than flavour, which isn’t a bad thing in some instances. However, the leaf under the octopus and between the rice gives more flavour than the octopus does, and over powers everything.
Steamed egg
Don’t leave without a nice warm steamed egg dish. Delicious, with chunks of fish running throughout.
Recently moved out to Taiwan and don't know how to order at restaurants? I got you sorted. Can read some characters but still don't quite know what you're ordering? I got you sorted.
This site has been developed to help people who can't speak or read Mandarin. I use pinyin, characters and English to talk about food ordering, and how you can do it at specific restaurants.
If you like it, then give me a shout!
Ash.
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