$23 for Naked Sushi Night Including One Shot of Sake or One Beer at Geisha House Steak & Sushi ($46 Value). Five Dates Available.
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Models recline on tables clothed in only seaweed and sushi as DJ spins popular tracks
If humans are mostly made of water, and fish traditionally inhabit water, fish should naturally occur in the human body. Fix this gap in nature’s logic with today’s Groupon: for $23, you get a naked sushi night (a $46 value) at Geisha House Steak & Sushi. Naked sushi night will be hosted at both the North location on Decatur Boulevard and South location on Fort Apache Road. Choose from the following locations and five dates:
- At the South location:
- Saturday, August 27 at 10:30 p.m.
- Saturday, October 22 at 10:30 p.m.
- Saturday, December 17 at 10:30 p.m.
- At the North location:
- Saturday, September 24 at 10:30 p.m.
- Saturday, November 19 at 10:30 p.m.
The sushi night includes:* Unlimited naked sushi portions (a $40 value) * Unlimited hibachi fare * One shot of [sake](http://www.geishasteakhouse.co.kr/geisha/sake/) or a beer (up to a $6 value)
Geisha House Steak & Sushi beckons guests to test chopstick accuracy during 4.5-hour naked sushi events exploring the art of nyotaimori, or body sushi. Two models perform their best table impressions as they recline clothed only in leaves, seaweed, and a varying selection of popular sushi specially designed to ward off sweaters. Master hibachi chefs perform their knife-based acrobatics model-side, serving up unlimited portions of fried rice as live DJs conjure clouds of background music. Guests pluck their sushi-laden models for fresh sustenance and scintillating peeks at office-floor-plan tattoos before sousing mouthfuls with shots of flavored sake and a range of domestic beers. Lasting until 3 a.m., naked sushi nights keep guests entertained until the wee hours of the morning, when sushi rolls return to their native habitat to hibernate during the day.
- At the North location:
Need To Know Info
About Geisha House Steak & Sushi
In 1971, Jimmy Nishiyama introduced the city of Las Vegas to Japanese hibachi cuisine. Three decades later, and friends have stayed very much in touch. During that time, Geisha House, Nishiyama's brainchild, has grown to fill two locations and eight menu pages. Colorful specialty sushi rolls, such as the baked Japanese Lasagna—cream cheese and mayo atop a crabmeat and avocado roll—make fitting partners for grilled lobster, filet mignon, or scallops in hibachi dinners. Nearly 30 varieties of sake trip merrily across the palate, while the Geisha martini blends sake with plum wine and a treasure trove of James Bond jokes.