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Conveyor belt sushi was invented by Yoshiaki Shiraishi [5] (1914–2001), who had problems staffing his small sushi restaurant and had difficulties managing the restaurant by himself. He got the idea of a conveyor belt sushi after watching beer bottles on a conveyor belt in an Asahi brewery. [1]
The first automat in the United States was opened by food services company Horn & Hardart on June 12, 1902, at 818 Chestnut St. [2] in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. [9] Inspired by Max Sielaff's automat restaurants in Berlin , they were among the first 47 restaurants (and the first outside of Europe) to receive patented vending machines from ...
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Kura Resolving Sushi Bar will open in Fishers with robot servers, tableside anime and prizes. What's on the menu? See how the restaurant works.
Conveyor belt sushi chains Hama-sushi and Kura Sushi, which were also targeted in the videos, have also said they will take legal action, according to the Jiji press agency.
A Japanese sushi chain targeted in a spate of pranks that has sparked concern over hygiene has devised a digital conveyor belt to serve food to customers.. Instead of placing sushi on a rotating ...
Sukiyabashi Jiro – a sushi restaurant in Ginza, Chūō, Tokyo, Japan, it is owned and operated by sushi master Jiro Ono. [4] The Michelin Guide has awarded it 3 stars. [ 5 ] A two-star branch operated by his son Takashi is located at Roppongi Hills in Minato, Tokyo .
Shiraishi opened his first conveyor belt restaurant, known in Japan as Kaiten-sushi, which translates as “rotation sushi”, in Higashiosaka, Japan in 1958. Upon his death in 2001, he operated ...