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Sushi Kai – Midtown Toronto

C$20 for C$40 Worth of Sushi and Japanese Cuisine

C$20
Buy
No Longer Available
Wed Jan 30 04:59:59 UTC 2013
Value
C$40
Discount
50%
You Save
C$20
  • T460x279

In a Nutshell

Skilled chefs roll 25 types of maki and stir up classic offerings of Japanese curry, teriyaki-slathered entrees, and vegetarian dishes

The Fine Print

  • Expires 180 days after purchase.
  • Limit 3 per person, may buy 1 additional as a gift. Limit 1 per table. Minimum 2 people required. Reservation required. Dine-in only. Must purchase a food item. Not valid for lunch special menu.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Sushi, like the archival footage of Rick Moranis's birth, is best known for its raw quality. Get attached to your food with this Groupon.

$20 for a $40 Worth of Sushi and Japanese Cuisine and Drinks

The menu includes Rainbow rolls topped with fresh salmon and red snapper ($8.99), salmon-skin rolls ($5.99), grilled-beef teriyaki ($11.95), and fried-vegetable udon ($8.99).

Sushi Kai

The artistic chefs at Sushi Kai skillfully cut sushi and use fresh fish, meats, and high-quality produce when creating dishes for their traditional Japanese menu. Celebrating Japan’s most popular import, the sushi chefs can roll choices from 25 maki options including barbecued eel and thinly carved yellowtail sashimi, or set off in-mouth fireworks with cone-shaped spicy-tuna hand rolls. Japanese curries introduce diners to a lesser-known Japanese specialty, greeting tongues with a choice of chicken, beef, pork, or fish. As diners share bites of sushi, they lounge in Sushi Kai's minimalist dining room and lecture its plants on proper photosynthesis technique.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Spicing Up a Monologue

Monologues are the most boring part of plays since they only involve a single performer and that single performer is never an adorable baby actor. To make these seemingly unending passages more interesting, follow these helpful tips:

  • Do something interesting with your voice. You could give your character an accent or, if you can't do a convincing accent, just yell the entire time.

  • Cut out all the unnecessary words, such as articles and any full sentences that don't foreshadow how the main character is a group of children hiding inside a man's suit.

  • Wear a funky hat or rad loafers. That'll give the audience something to look at!

  • Perform it with multiple people and tell the director you're going to start calling it a fun-o-logue.

  • Start at the end of the monologue and work backward. Then when you finish, tell the audience that they just got Pranked'd™. (If you're interested in buying the rights to use the name Pranked'd™, probably for a hilarious hidden-camera goof show, please contact Groupon for more information.)

Why is there so much yelling in plays? Find out in today's Groupon Guide.

Sushi Kai

2.5 out of 5
  • A

    Midtown Toronto

    168 Eglinton Avenue East
    Toronto, Ontario M4P 1A6
    Get Directions