Chirashi in the time of COVID-19: 4 new options for excellent takeout sushi

Chirashi from Sushi ii.
Chirashi from Sushi ii. (Garrett Snyder / Los Angeles Times)

Before the pandemic, a visit to one of L.A.’s upscale sushi restaurants might have gone something like this: You sit shoulder to shoulder at a narrow counter while a chef skillfully assembles pieces of nigiri and gently hands them to you one at a time, patiently explaining where the fish was caught and how it was prepared.

Oh, how times have changed. Like so many other aspects of life, the pandemic has turned the intimacy and immediacy of the omakase experience into a liability rather than a luxury.

And yet, forced to adapt, L.A.’s most serious sushi chefs have elevated takeout sushi to new heights. Most frequently that has meant chirashizushi, a colorful layering of sliced fish over vinegar-seasoned rice that in some circles has become the official takeout splurge of 2020.

At its pinnacle, a chirashi bowl is both practical and indulgent, a mosaic of tastes and textures packed as neatly as a box of See's Candies and equally thrilling to dive into. Befitting these times, culinary historians believe the dish originated in Japan as a special-occasion meal during a period of relative austerity in the 17th century. Commoners would arrange pieces of fish and other toppings beneath a layer of rice to hide their extravagance, flipping the dish over to reveal their gem-like beauty once it was time to celebrate.

But not all chirashi are created equal. Much like nigiri sushi, the best versions require a rigorous attention to detail that belies its simple presentation.

“Takeout sushi is something that I think is hard to do really well, because traditionally sushi is at its best when you eat it right away,” said Tomoko Imade Dyen, an L.A.-based consultant and marketing director for Japanese restaurants in the U.S.

“With great chirashi, there are so many little differences that the average customer might not notice — from the type of rice that is used to how the fish is cut. It’s not as easy as putting raw fish on top of rice.”

Among the multitude of outstanding sushi restaurants in L.A., here are four newcomers offering their compelling take on takeout.

A box of Osaka-style sushi from Sushi ii in Newport Beach.
A box of Osaka-style sushi from Sushi ii in Newport Beach. (Garrett Snyder / Los Angeles Times)

Sushi ii



The bestseller is Ii’s deluxe chirashi, a stunning $35 assemblage that shows off the veteran chef’s knack for sourcing and precision: wedges of soft-sweet tamago, gently cured Spanish mackerel and slips of squid scored and massaged into tender submission. Each order comes with a note suggesting the chirashi be eaten within the hour to preserve its optimal temperature — a good excuse to head to nearby John Wayne Park and eat your sushi picnic-style with a panoramic view of Newport Harbor’s million-dollar yachts.

100 West Coast Highway, #202, Newport Beach, (949) 287-6268, sushi-ii.com

The 10-piece omakase nigiri set at Sushi Tama in West Hollywood.
The 10-piece omakase nigiri set at Sushi Tama in West Hollywood. (Garrett Snyder / Los Angeles Times)

Sushi Tama



The restaurant offers a chirashi bowl on its dine-in menu but not for takeout; instead there’s a 10-piece nigiri set for $45, packaged in a handsome black box that comes with a tiny squeeze bottle of soy sauce and a tuft of sliced pickled ginger. Tama’s selection of fish is simple and satisfying: tuna, hamachi, scallop, ikura and uni, each impeccably fresh with a clean oceanic sweetness. Look closely and you’ll see dashes of flair: broiled anago (sea eel) is prepared from scratch each day, while scored halibut fin and a braided kohada (marinated gizzard shad) show off Yoshimoto’s tricky knife techniques.

116 N. Robertson Blvd., Los Angeles,  (424) 249-3009, sushitama-la.com

The premium chirashi bowl at Izakaya Tonchinkan in Arcadia
The premium chirashi bowl at Izakaya Tonchinkan in Arcadia (Garrett Snyder / Los Angeles Times)

Izakaya Tonchinkan



713 W. Duarte Road, #H, Arcadia, (626) 461-5078, tonchinkan.izakaya.la

The omakase nama chirashi at Sushi Kaneyoshi in Little Tokyo
The omakase nama chirashi at Sushi Kaneyoshi in Little Tokyo. (Garrett Snyder / Los Angeles Times)

Sushi Kaneyoshi



Chief among them is his nama chirashi, delicate slices of fish — Japanese beltfish, barracuda, kelp-marinated snapper, sea trout, fatty and lean tuna, blue shrimp, uni and caviar-topped scallop — neatly arranged like marble tiles over warm, immaculately cooked rice. At $85, it’s spendier than most chirashi but also more labor-intensive. Inoue weaves in traditional Edo-era sushi techniques with his personal style, highlighting the intricate flavor of each fish by aging it for days or curing it in shoyu or seaweed. The result is a box that manages to capture the thrill of dining at a sushi bar without the seat. Each bite builds in savory intensity until the last mouthful of rice has disappeared.

250 E. 1st St., #B1, Los Angeles, (213) 277-2388, kaneyoshi.us

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.