Nori-Maki and California Roll — Sushi Roll Tradition
Japan — traditional hosomaki from Edo period; California Roll from Los Angeles c.1970
Makizushi (rolled sushi) encompasses a range of sizes and forms: hosomaki (thin rolls, single-filling: tekka-maki/tuna, kappa-maki/cucumber, natto-maki); chumaki (medium rolls, 2–3 fillings); futomaki (fat rolls, 4–5 filling combination, associated with Setsubun/bean-throwing festival); temaki (hand-rolled cone); and uramaki (inside-out roll, rice on exterior — the California Roll format). The California Roll (avocado, crab/imitation crab, cucumber, inside-out with sesame) was developed in Los Angeles circa 1970 by Ichiro Mashita and Hidekazu Tojo (the latter in Vancouver) specifically for Western audiences unfamiliar with raw fish — a deliberate adaptation that became the global gateway to sushi. Classic Japanese maki technique: rice spread evenly to within 1cm of far edge of nori; fillings placed 1/3 up from the near edge; roll using the bamboo mat, pressing firmly but not crushing; let rest 1 minute before cutting with a wet knife.