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Sushi Bears – Multiple Locations

$39 for Two-Hour Sushi-Making Class for Two ($80 Value)

$39
Buy
No Longer Available
Tue Mar 12 03:59:59 UTC 2013
Value
$80
Discount
51%
You Save
$41
  • T460x279
  • Kitchen Couture
  • Date Night
  • Foodie

In a Nutshell

Sushi chef imparts basics of seasoning rice and making maki rolls; students receive sushi-rolling DVDs to practice at home

The Fine Print

  • Expires Jun 5, 2013
  • Appointment required; subject to availability.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Like the earth, sushi consists of layers and was apparently invented by someone who really liked the ocean. Explore waves of flavor with this Groupon.

$39 for a Two-Hour Sushi-Making Class for Two ($80 Value)

Sushi Bears’ Chef Dan leads groups in the careful art of seasoning rice and rolling custom-filled maki rolls during two-hour classes. Each student leaves the workshop with a belly full of sushi and each twosome gets a sushi-rolling DVD to brush up on their skills at home.

Sushi Bears

Sushi Bears rolls vegetarian and traditional sushi rolls under the direction of Chef Dan, whose passion for healthful eats led him to open his stand at Findlay Market, where he holds weekly sushi-making classes. Sushi Bears’ menu includes smoked-salmon philly rolls and tempura-fried sushi. Chef Dan also hosts sushi-rolling parties in private homes.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Speed-Reading

Reading is so boring that if you don't do it fast, you're at risk of falling asleep and hitting your head on a book. Diminish your reading time to mere seconds a day with these speed-reading tips:

  • Practice moving your eyes really fast by quickly looking back and forth at a set of twins until they start to look like one person.

  • Most written text is full of extra words that the author put in to sound smart and pay homage to that old hag Mother Grammar. Skip the fluff by only reading words that are men's names, parts of a horse, in a crazy font, or "Las Vegas."

  • Do not ever read anything inside of parentheses. Parentheses are the garbage can of the page where the author puts his least important or most disgusting thoughts.

  • Use the shape of a paragraph to guide you. Big and blocky? No use in reading what's probably just boring backstory. Thin and slim? You've found that sweet, scintillating mistress we call dialogue—read away.

(Do NOT read this.)

Sushi Bears