Toyama Sushi — Toyama Bay's Fresh Seafood Harvest
Toyama Bay is renowned as Japan's 'natural fish preserve' — a unique underwater topography where depths plunge to 1,000+ meters close to shore, creating habitat for both deep-sea and coastal species. The bay's cold, nutrient-rich currents support 500+ fish species including winter yellowtail (buri), white shrimp (shiro-ebi, found only in Toyama Bay), firefly squid, and prized snapper.
Toyama-style sushi emphasizes extreme freshness — fish landed at dawn appear on sushi counters by lunch. The city's kaiten-zushi (回転寿司, conveyor belt sushi) restaurants offer quality surpassing Tokyo's mid-range sushi at affordable prices (¥150–500 per plate). Signature toppings include shiro-ebi (translucent white shrimp, sweet and delicate), buri (fatty winter yellowtail), and nodoguro (blackthroat seaperch, prized for rich flavor).
Top sushi shops cluster near Toyama Station and in the Iwase Canal area. Sushi restaurants source directly from Shinminato Fishing Port (20km west) and Himi Port (30km west), cutting out wholesalers. The result is Tokyo-quality sushi at 50–60% of Tokyo prices.
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