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Shiro
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Promotional Information

Promotional event at Shiro's restaurant in Seattle, May 2011
Excerpted in Ibuki magazine in spring 2011 (ibukimagazine.com)
Promoted by the Japan-America Society of Washington (date TBA)

About the Author

Shiro Kashiba is an award-winning sushi chef trained in Tokyo's Ginza district at one of Japan's elite sushi restaurants. He opened the first sushi bar in Seattle, WA, in 1966 and pioneered a sushi boom in the Pacific Northwest, opening several restaurants and training future sushi chefs in his kitchen. He is a staunch advocate of using local ingredients and serves locally sourced sushi and Japanese cuisine at his popular Seattle sushi bar, Shiro's. Ann Norton is a Seattle-based fine artist specializing in photography.

Reviews

"Three days a week you'll find Seattle's pre-eminent sushi chef right where he wants to be: standing behind his sushi bar, celebrating the fact that at 70, he's doing what he dreamt of doing as a grade-school boy in Kyoto. These days (Kashiba) has something else to celebrate, and so do we: the publication of his memoir, Shiro: Wit, Wisdom and Recipes from a Sushi Pioneer. Beautifully photographed and illustrated, filled with memories spanning seven decades and two continents, the book chronicles his years spent as a sushi apprentice in Tokyo's Ginza district and brings us up-to-date with Seattle's contemporary sushi scene" --The Seattle Times "(Kashiba's) appreciation of local sea life--and his serious concern for its survival--permeates the book, which itself is awash in gorgeous illustrations, vintage photos, and recipes and tips from the sushi master. Forty-five years after landing in Seattle, now boasting legions of regular customers (including Bill and Melinda Gates, Ichiro Suzuki and Gerard Schwarz), Shiro tells readers how he got here. It's a lovely immigrant song." --Seattle Magazine "Shiro is engrossing and thoughtful--plenty of pleas for more sustainable seafood practices--and paints a striking picture of the development of Seattle's sushi culture. The friendly tips from the chef, along with his own personal ephemera, make it a personal and personable read, much like the venerable master himself." --MSN.com "Sushi lovers will delight in this softbound sensation, filled with artwork and ephemera that traces Shiro-san's footsteps from his native Kyoto to Tokyo's Ginza district to Seattle's International District and beyond." --Nancy Leson, The Seattle Times "Together with Kashiba's recollections, the images and illustrations make up a compelling portrait of a chef who crystallized a very specific Seattle food ethos long before the national media had taken note of Pacific Northwesterners' locavore tendencies." --Seattle Weekly "Shiro: Wit, Wisdom and Recipes from a Sushi Pioneer has something to appeal to everyone. It is the success story of a plucky, ambitious young immigrant making his way in a city with its own ambitions. It is a manifesto for a sustainable Northwest cuisine. It is a manual for making it in the restaurant business. And it is a cookbook of recipes and tips from one of Seattle's top chefs. All told in the cheerful aw-shucks voice of a friend sitting at the kitchen table with his photo album and scrapbook." --The International Examiner "(Shiro) is quite lovely, with many, many beautiful photos--the black-and-white ones of (Kashiba) and his hiking buddies in Japan in his youth are especially great." --The Stranger "Shiro Kashiba's memoir, Shiro: Wit, Wisdom and Recipes from Sushi Pioneer (Chin Music Press), takes us from the Ginza district of Tokyo to the shores of Puget Sound, where in 1966, the author says, "there wasn't a sushi bar anywhere." Shiro changed that with a series of restaurants --culminating with his namesake Belltown eatery-- and helped put both raw fish and Seattle on the American culinary map. Though he considered moving elsewhere, the Pacific Northwest's bounty (salmon, tuna, oft-overlooked smelt, and the otherworldly geoduck) was too rich to pass up. You could say the same for the book's final 90 pages: recipes and tips that have made Shiro's sushi some of the best in the land." --Seattle Metropolitan Magazine

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