Tasty Conveyor Belt Sushi at Tora

Tora
Location
: 3401 Dufferin Street, North York (inside Yorkdale Mall)
Website: https://www.aburitora.com/

Tora is a conveyor belt sushi place, which is mostly a gimmick, but a fun one.  They have a million of these in Japan, but they have yet to take off in Toronto for some reason.

Tora

(There’s been a few over the years, but I believe this is the only one that’s currently open.)

Tora

I should note that there isn’t any pre-made sushi going around on the belt that you can pick up — there’s a tablet at every table, and you order on the touchscreen.  A few minutes later (it’s very quick), the sushi zips along on the conveyor belt and stops at your table.

Tora

The sushi itself isn’t going to blow anyone’s mind, but it’s all solid.  Everything I tried was pretty decent, with the exception of the tuna nigiri, which was a bit fishy.

Tora

One of the specialties here is aburi sushi, which is a style of sushi that’s torched on top; a card on the table noted that the aburi ebi oshi, which features shrimp and a mayonnaisey sauce, is one of their most popular dishes.  And yeah, that was probably the highlight of the bunch, with a decent smoky flavour from the torch and a nice zippiness from the mayo.

Tasty Hand Rolls at Hello Nori

Hello Nori
Location
: 648 King Street West, Toronto
Website: https://www.hellonori.com/

Hello Nori specializes in hand rolls — basically loosely constructed , uncut maki rolls –that they make in front of you and serve immediately.  You wouldn’t think that would make that much of a difference, but the fact that the nori is still crispy when they give it to you is actually quite delightful.

Hello Nori

It kind of reminds me of the onigiri they serve at variety stores in Japan, where the nori is wrapped on both sides to prevent contact with the rice until you eat it.  Crispy nori and fluffy sushi rice turns out to be a great combo.

Hello Nori

You can either order the rolls on their own (most of them are between six and nine dollars) or as a combo.  I went with the four roll combo, which costs $23 and comes with negitoro (minced tuna and green onion), ora king salmon, snow crab, and spicy shrimp.

Hello Nori

The negitoro was a bit oniony for me (raw onions are for jerks), but otherwise these were all thoroughly enjoyable.  The rice was underseasoned, but then they do have soy sauce right in front of you at the bar; I think the expectation is that you’ll be dipping the rolls.

Hello Nori

The salmon — which features big chunks of tasty fish — was probably my favourite of the bunch, but I liked them all.

Hello Nori

I was worried four rolls might not be enough, but it was actually a pretty decent portion, at least for lunch.

Board the Sushi Train at Hana Sushi

Hana SushiLocation: 21 Grenville Street, Toronto
Websitehttps://www.facebook.com/hanasushicafe/

Hana Sushi is gimmicky AF.  But it’s fun.  It’s essentially a conveyor belt sushi place, but all of the food you order comes on a tiny little train that runs on a separate set of tracks.

Hana Sushi

You also order everything on a tablet, so if you want to eat sushi with as little human interaction as possible, this is your place (though the waitress has to explain the whole system to you, and then brings your bill at the end of the meal, so it’s not quite a human-free experience).

Hana Sushi

As for the sushi itself: it’s fine.  It’s about on par with the hundreds of passable sushi joints across the GTA, so it’s really only the gimmick that sets it apart.  The rice was underseasoned and a little bit too dense, but the quality of the fish was decent, and the rolls were well put-together.

Hana Sushi

I had a variety of nigiri and rolls; the only one that really stood out was the torched salmon, which had a nicely smoky flavour from the flame, but which was still melt-in-your-mouth tender.