Kura Sushi Carousel Restaurant

Sushi carousel restaurants in Japan are great places to eat and so much better in terms of value and quality than you might find in the UK.

There is a chain of Sushi carousel restaurants called Kura that we have visited in Mie and Osaka where most plates are ¥100 each. Sometimes a more expensive dish will be ¥200 but these are easy to spot because they are on two plates stacked and clipped together. Kura has impressed us both with the variety and freshness of their Sushi.

You can expect to wait for a seat if you arrive a peak times, they usually make you take a ticket and wait until your number is called.

Kura change their menus several times a year, the one pictured above is their summer 2019 menu and shows a variety of fresh seasonal sushi.

There is something very Japanese about a sushi carousel restaurant with it’s conveyor belt and iPad automated ordering system. In case you are not familiar with a sushi carousel restaurant, there will be a conveyor belt running throughout the restaurant which carries plates of sushi straight from the kitchen all around the dinning room.

As a dish goes past, if you see one you like, you just take it of the conveyor. At the end of your meal you are charged according to the number of empty plates you have amassed.

You can also order from a iPad type device by scrolling through the pages and selecting the dish you want to order. This allows you to order electronically direct from the kitchen without the need for a waiter or waitress. Although I couldn’t find a way to switch to English on the Kura devices, it is pretty straightforward to operate and in most cases you can easily see what the selection is from the pictures.

In Kura. when you have ordered from the iPad your food will be delivered to you on a separate conveyor belt.

Whereas in the UK eating at a well known chain sushi carousel would likely set me back around £150 for the 5 of us, which is partly because my family love sushi and the self service nature of these places coupled with the small portions encourages the children to keep eating. When we all went to Kura in Izumisano, Osaka we had a big blow out and ate until we could eat no more and the bill came to ¥9000 which is about £68.00

For every 5 plates the children get an opportunity to play a brief video game to try and win a small prize, we reckon the success rate of a child playing the game is something like 1 in 5, but it was the cause of great excitement at the end of our meal.

You can also order fried chicken, miso soup, chips, onion rings, ramen and tempura, these dishes have to be ordered from the electronic menu and cost up to ¥380. They also do a very good bacon cheese burger, it kind of goes against the grain to for me to order a burger in Sushi restaurant but I did it in the name of research and have to say I’m glad I did.

Eating well on a budget

If like us, your budget doesn’t allow for eating in a top restaurant every day then I have some suggestions for how to eat well when you’re on a budget.

Ramen Noodle bars are generally good value and one of the few things that are cheaper in Japan than in London. Ramen noodle bars can be found all around the country.

The noodles shown above are from a Ramen bar in Matsusaka and cost ¥900, which in August 2019 equates to £6.95. On average a bowl of Ramen in London will set you back about £12.00.

Eating in restaurants at train stations and in shopping malls is also good value, often they have wax models of the food that you can point at to let them know what you want to eat, which is very useful if like me you only know a few words in Japanese.

The quality of food is always good in these places, much, much higher than you would get in a UK shopping mall or train station. Often you can get a set meal with lots of side dishes, like a salad, noodles, rice, bit of fish or meat, some pickles, miso soup all on a tray and it is always very good. The photos of meals shown above were taken in the Aeon Mall, Tsu City. Most of them work out at about just less than £10 each and the quality is outstanding considering this a food court in a shopping mall.

The two meals shown above are the actual food we chose from the was models at the Food Court in the Aeon Mall.

Likewise, motorway services are also good value places to eat. Often low budget restaurants will require you to order from a vending machine. Simply match the number on the vending machine with wax model or picture of the food you want, insert cash and take the resultant token or ticket to a member of the restaurant staff and they will then prepare your food.

We stopped at a motorway service station in Mie on the way to Nara and the food on offer was again presented in wax model form.

The pictures above are of the actual meals we bought at the Motorway services station and again the food was really good and great value at about ¥1100 each. There was free unlimited green tea and water. Unlike the UK, Motorway services station offer great value food for the traveller on a budget.

If you’re travelling and want a packed lunch, buy stuff from the 24hr convenience stores, such as 7/11, Lawson, Family Mart, Circle K and Ministop. You can get great sandwiches, unusual crisps, decent fried chicken and Onigiri, all quite reasonably priced and tasty. This is what we do when we’re heading off on family day trips.

You will be able to buy cold drinks and water just about anywhere in Japan, vending machines are all over the place and are never, ever, vandalised and always in working order, even in the remotest of rural areas. Most vending machines will contain at least water, iced coffee and green tea and these drinks will cost around ¥120 – ¥200 each.

Most supermarkets sell hot food to take away such as croquettes, Fired Chicken, Tempura prawns and vegetables. Supermarkets are another good place to stock on food when you are planning to travel all day

The above selection of bento boxes, onigiri and tempura was on sale in a supermarket in the Aeon Mall in Tsu City.

Welcome to Travel Tips for Japan

I’m not a travel writer, why have I written these travel tips for Japan? My wife is Japanese and although we live in London, every summer we visit our family in Japan. My wife takes the children the moment they break up from school and I join them for 2 weeks at the end of August.

Back in 2016 several colleagues told me they were going to visit Japan and asked if I had any tips. So I wrote a few notes in an email based on my experiences and gradually this blog has grown from that.

Most of my time in Japan is spent in the prefecture of Mie, which is sort of mid-way between Nagoya and Osaka, although I have visited Tokyo and Kyoto a couple of times and every year I try to explore somewhere new.

I hope you find these useful.

Ian

London, September 2019