Philippine Daily Inquirer

Robot chefs make sushi for Japanese

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TOKYO—With its masters required to hone their skills over decades, sushi in Japan is steeped in tradition. But it is also often a hightech operation, where robotic precision steals the limelight from the chef’s knife.

The country is dotted with thousands of “kaiten” (revolving) sushi restaurant­s, where raw fish slices atop rice balls travel on conveyor

belts along counters waiting to be picked up by diners.

Behind the scenes, however, it is far from a simple merry-goround, with robots in some locations rolling out perfectly sized rice balls onto plates embedded with microchips.

Measured dollops of spicy wasabi paste are squirted onto the rice assembly line before they’re topped with raw fish.

And the most cutting-edge eateries are even connected to monitoring centers that can quickly tell whether the right balance of dishes is being produced—a far cry from traditiona­l places where the sushi chef and his knife still reign supreme.

“Sushi isn’t going round at random but rather it is coming out based on a number of calculatio­ns,” said Akihiro Tsuji, public relations manager at Kura Corp., a major operator in a market expected to hit $5 billion in revenue this year, according to industry figures.

“Though traditiona­l, sushi is stuffed with high technology. You can’t operate low-price revolving sushi restaurant­s without databases and scientific management,” he told Agence FrancePres­se at a Tokyo outlet.

‘Mr. Fresh’

Kura has invented a serving device called “sendo-kun,” which roughly translates as “Mr Fresh,” a plate with a transparen­t dome that opens automatica­lly when diners select the dish.

While the hood keeps the sushi moist and clean, it also contains a microchip telling managers what kind of fish are swinging around on the conveyer belts and how long they have been there.

Since their birth half a century ago, kaiten sushi restaurant­s have evolved from selling traditiona­l sushi into miniature museums of the food that Japanese people eat today, including battered tempura, noodles and even ice cream.

The dishes are cheap, usually starting at around 100 yen (around $1) for two pieces of sushi.

High-speed lanes

Now, more and more outlets are equipped with dedicated “high-speed” lanes where customers can receive their order via a touch-screen menu.

Ryozo Aida, a 68-year-old university lecturer, said he visits the Kura outlet with his wife because of its “affordable prices.” “It may sound strange in a sushi restaurant, but I like tempura,” he said as he jabbed his fingers at a touch-screen panel.

Inside the kitchen, screens show how many adults and children are dining and roughly how long they have been in the restaurant.

“Even if all the 199 seats here are occupied, how much sushi we need will differ depending on how long they have been at the table,” Tsuji said.

The system combines real-time data with informatio­n about how many items were consumed in similar circumstan­ces in the past, displaying results for kitchen staff.

Assistance system

Complement­ing on-the-spot efforts, the Kura chain also has a remote assistance system serving its network of more than 300 outlets.

In-store cameras feed images to dozens of supervisor­s who move from restaurant to restaurant with laptops—while others watch from monitoring centers— to advise restaurant­s instantly if there is enough food and the right mix of offerings on the conveyer belt.

The cameras can zoom in on sushi to make sure it is laid out in regulation elegance—although they don’t monitor customers’ faces for privacy reasons.

At another outlet run by Genki Sushi’s “Uobei” brand in the fashionabl­e Tokyo district of Shibuya, the concept of one conveyor belt has been updated. All 90 seats face counters with three decks of “high-speed” lanes delivering sushi directly to the person who ordered via multilingu­al touch screen.

Name of the game

Accuracy and speed is the name of the game with the store targeting delivery in under a minute.

“As we looked at how fast we can deliver what’s ordered, we came up with this system,” said Akira Koyanagi, district manager for Genki, adding that it also cuts down on wasted food.

All this high technology costs money, but sales at kaiten sushi restaurant­s have grown 20 percent over the past five years, with the industry expected to rake in nearly $5 billion this year, according to research firm Fuji-Keizai Group.

A key challenge, however, is that Japanese people are eating less fish and more meat these days as world prices rise due to strong demand in the United States and Europe.

“Procuremen­t is getting tough,” said a Genki Sushi spokespers­on.

 ?? AFP ?? SUSHI EXPRESS Three decks of “high-speed” lanes transport sushi dishes for customers at the Uobei sushi restaurant in Tokyo in this photo taken on June 10. It is famous as a food steeped in tradition, where master chefs must hone their skills over...
AFP SUSHI EXPRESS Three decks of “high-speed” lanes transport sushi dishes for customers at the Uobei sushi restaurant in Tokyo in this photo taken on June 10. It is famous as a food steeped in tradition, where master chefs must hone their skills over...
 ?? AFP ?? RICE BALL MACHINE A rice ball machine is seen at the kitchen of the Kura Corp. sushi restaurant in Tokyo.
AFP RICE BALL MACHINE A rice ball machine is seen at the kitchen of the Kura Corp. sushi restaurant in Tokyo.

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