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Sumo Maya

This almost feels like a crime, but here’s a post from only 50% of the duo. Ashley had dinner at Sumo Maya with some friends and couldn’t resist a mention of the top 2 (well, only 2) rolls of the night. The reality is Ashley was too busy with the rainbow ceviche, bacon wrapped dates, and pomegranate guac to overdose on sushi. So drum roll please….
The table’s pic (minus Ashley because of an allergy) is….. the Crab Roll! You’re looking at: avocado, cucumber, kimchee, tobiko, pineapple pico + wasabi aioli.

And Ashley’s pick (twice!) is the Happy Ending Roll. This roll has yellowtail, serrano, true aioli, shrimp, tobiko + aguachile. <Clap Clap Clap> Highly recommend! Ashley feels old even saying this… but it does get a little loud on the weekend nights, but the atmosphere is great. Make a reservation for sure!

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Sur La Table – Sushi Class

We can only critique sushi restaurants for so long before we have to try our hand at making rolls ourselves. That’s exactly what we did at the Kierland Sur La Table Handroll Sushi Making Class. Carter and Ashley agree–making sushi is not easy. It is an ART! An art that – not only have we not mastered – we’re sort of in the Pre-K art class just learning our way. The class, however, was phenomenal despite our inability to make pretty sushi. We will admit though, there were some genius sushi artists around us who seemed to know a thing or two about it all and Sur La Table’s chef guided the way, but nothing can make up for our elementary knife skills, lack of patience, and desire to overstuff the hand rolls.

So we start. Ashley looks at all the ingredients. In her mind, she will buy all these ingredients and transform her own kitchen into a sushi making paradise. She will even make the homemade Japanese mayo that is key to the spicy tuna roll. Narrator: Ashley, indeed, never transforms her kitchen into a sushi making paradise. However. It is worth noting that this class inspired Ashley and Carter to buy a rice maker (amazing) and a little bamboo thing (technical term) to make some simplified rolls.

We get to work. The chef assumes we have basic competence to use sharp knives. Ashley quickly shares with Carter every risk averse knife tip she can dream up. Thankfully, the pair in front of Ashley and Carter know what they’re doing. Ashley and Carter focus on the green onions, avocado, and some of the carrots.



Boom. Sushi (CA rolls and veggie rolls!!) magically appear. It’s not ours… that’s our partners’ sushi across the table from us. We remain thankful for them. We decide to roll up sushi tacos and some rudimentary cavemen sushi, but then make something almost beautiful when the teacher-chef helps us.
Next up, is spicy tuna rolls. Our sushi partner team isn’t in the mood for tuna, so Carter and Ashley adopt the entire giant bowl and make so many rolls they literally can barely walk out of sushi class. (Yes, we eat as we cook… a lot).

Our spicy tuna becomes our baby. We take time to make it just right. We’re careful and this time – THIS TIME – we will have a sushi roll. Narrator: They did, in fact, create a sushi roll, but not one that the general public would likely want to purchase. It tasted amazing.

The class was really entertaining. There were a few people on dates there — it definitely is a great date idea. And there were some mother/daughter duos… plus us, a mother/son duo. Our sushi platter at the end wasn’t blog worthy, so a nice couple let us take a photo of theirs. Here’s the finished product – voila! Highly recommend the class.

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Nobu – AZ

It isn’t often we introduce a sushi restaurant with a review of our drink, but we absolutely had to do so here. The Yuzo Strawberry Calpico is strawberry happiness in a glass. The name is pretty much the recipe: strawberry Calpico, yuzu, lime & mint. But the magic all happens at Nobu–with perhaps a little simple syrup in the mix. We actually tried to recreate this at our house and simply couldn’t do it! This kid-friendly (but adult favorite!) drink has a forever home on our table.

We somehow made it there for happy hour and I’d love to tell you we didn’t leave with a giant dent in our wallet, but that just wouldn’t be true. Happy hour just allowed us to rationalize eating a whole lot more than we planned! Spicy tuna x 2, salmon avocado rolls x 2, ahi tuna and crispy rice cakes, 4 tuna Nobu tacos, and (Ashley’s fave) the toro tartare with caviar.

If you ask Carter – he’d stick with the happy hour (see rolls above) and just keep those rolls coming all hour. Ashley would have endless toro tartare — the best spicy bite in town! She would also find a way to take all the tuna Nobu tacos for herself.

Our biggest recommendation is to get there the second the restaurant opens (it varies from 5 to 5:30 depending on the season) and get one of the tables near the bar. The hour-long happy hour will help you justify everything you’re about to eat and drink… And it’s all amazing. Absolutely will go back. 10 / 10.

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Toro Latin American Restaurant and Rum Bar

Toro is nestled outside the 18th hole of the TPC Stadium course and has the most eclectic combo of amazing sushi, Latin American cuisine, a finer version of post golf American food, and a rum bar! Because of this, our meal ranged from multiple plates of sushi, carnitas tacos, and even fresh squeezed OJ.
We had some extra fun with a friend joining us today and – between our crew – we kept their kitchen busy with food customizations to accommodate our food allergies. Not only were they happy to oblige, but we all left the meal saying it is one of our best sushi experiences we have had. So fresh, unique, and flavorful. Chef Richard Sandoval knew what he was doing for sure!
What did we have? The three rolls you need to know about the most are the Havana Roll (omg Ashley’s fave); Rainbow Tropical Roll (Milana and Carter’s fave); and Acevichado Roll (amazing kick of spice)! We actually forgot we had salmon nigiri in front of us and tacos on their way because we were loving the speciality rolls. Ashley wants to go back and try the hot dog with bacon morita chile jam… maybe you’ll see us there next weekend!

Toro Sushi Here’s a little more about the rolls. Note the pics are slightly modified due to our VIP (allergy) requests.
Havana Roll: spicy crab, cucumber, sweet plantain, avocado, maple-miso glaze, and crispy potato. The plantain alone is worth it. Makes the roll a little crunchy and different.
Rainbow Tropical Roll: Dungeness crab, cucumber, tuna, hamachi salmon, avocado, and mango papaya salsa. An easy and unique crowd pleaser.
Acevichado Roll: Fish tiradito, leche de tigre, togarashi aioli, shrimp tempura, and kabayaki. Loved the kick of spice.

Let’s not forget — while we loved the sushi, the view was just as amazing. And we spent some time checking out the interactive golf course map on the way in to lunch. We will absolutely be back. The Scottsdale Princess is our favorite place for a Christmas staycation— so we will need to fit Toro in for lunch and then we can watch the ice skaters on the patio at La Hacienda during dinner.

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Serea Coastal Cuisine at Hotel del Coronado

We want to talk about sushi that will change your life. But first –you might have noticed this Scottsdale / Phoenix sushi blog has ventured outside of the state. It’s summer. Like most Arizonans, we hopped over to California for a week by the beach and enjoyed our usual family fun at the Hotel del Coronado.
Our last night at the Del we enjoyed our dinner with an ocean view at Serea. While there were limited sushi options, our server was amazing and helpful (even accommodating some bizarre requests because Carter’s 6-year-old sister decided she was going to be the queen of her own dinner).
So what did we get? The Baja Kampachi: sashimi (yellowtail) with lime, cilantro, mint, dukkah, dried cherries and schug. The most amazing crunch comes from the dukkah and the dish is life changing. Ashley literally tells her friends about it and is already planning their 2023 family vacation around a *very necessary* meal at Serea. After a beach day and twilight golf at the Coronado Municipal course, the Baja Kampachi paired perfectly for Ashley with the most amazing hibiscus drink ever. Ask your server and thank us later — it’s the one with the pineapple rum.
When you’re finished, make sure you have a fire pit reserved so you can end the evening at the Del making s’mores with your family.


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JRDN at Pacific Beach

The California vacay keeps on going! This night, the Arizona crew ended up at JRDN at Pacific Beach. Even if they didn’t serve up the sushi, the views alone were priceless. We came into this trendy place as a ragtag crew who was STARVING after a day in San Diego. I was honestly a little thankful the server was amazing and pretended not to notice we were a little soaked, sunburnt and probably not magazine worthy at that moment.
We had two favorites for the night: the Roulette Roll with torched salmon, (we removed the crab because of Ashley’s crab allergy), avocado, fried shishito peppers, spicy mayo and eel sauce; and the Tuna, Tuna, Tuna Roll with ahi tuna, albacore tuna, cucumber, spicy tuna, yamagobo, shiso, negi, and sesame ginger sauce.

We ate every piece of sushi and lived our best life. 
AND. The view! This picture is taken just steps away from the restaurant and the ocean view is visible from the table. What a way for some Arizona kids to end the day. 
723 Felspar St., San Diego, CA 92109
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Mastro’s Ocean Club

Ok. The preface of this post has to be that Mastro’s Ocean Club at Kierland can actually do no wrong in Ashley’s opinion. It’s the place she celebrated her 40th birthday and the splurge for the Japanese A5 Wagyu is worth every penny. But we aren’t here to talk about non-sushi items, so we’re going to focus.
The sushi selection is limited as of the date of this blog — 4 selections. That being said, limited doesn’t mean that the items are anything short of wonderful. Chef Angel Carbajal of Nick- San Cabo San Lucas developed the list and it’s fantastic.
Top on the list for us is the Maguro Lime Role. If you can fit the giant bite in your mouth, there’s a kick of spice in the roll. What you’ll find: big eye tuna, California yellow pepper, spicy mayo, and avocado– wrapped in sushi rice and nori seaweed paper, and topped lime slides. More than enough to share.

As a side note, the service here is amazing. I suppose it should be given the fine dining experience, but I have to say I genuinely appreciate a kind server who spends the time to share information and opinions about the food — and you’ll find that here.
Ok, ok. I also can’t resist posting a photo of the wagyu beef. Very necessary if you’re celebrating something special.

Kierland
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Raindrops Mini Gummy Sushi

If sugar is more your thing than sushi, you should check out the Gummy Sushi we picked up from Doodlet’s, a Santa Fe toy and gift store that has been open since 1955.

So what do you get in a pack? Three “sushi” — the green and yellow is predictably green apple with crunch lemon balls mimicking sesame. The orange fish has a predictable and nice orange / marshmallow blend. And we can’t figure out if the red is sour cherry or strawberry tape and marshmallow. $3.95 and 140 calories later, we were quite pleased with our little sugar explosion.
For those into charcuterie boards, it could actually be a fun idea to serve a plate of “sushi” candy dessert and dream up even more styles on your own.

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P.F. Chang’s

Ok this was our bad. Ordered the spicy tuna roll to go. On the Uber Eats trip to us it sadly lived between two hot, amazing dishes (Kung Pao Chicken and GF Chang’s Spicy Chicken). You can guess how our sushi fared. I would like to think it would have been amazing…

Spicy Tuna Roll Kierland


