$7 for $15 Worth of Sushi, Thai Fare, and Drinks at Sushi Nagasaki
Similar deals
- Conventional & signature rolls
- Seasonal Thai menu
- Friendly, attentive service
The traditional method for preparing sushi requires slices of raw fish to be held over unlit fires in order to secure that signature “uncooked” flavor. Explore such innovative foodsmithing with today’s Groupon: for $7, you get $15 worth of sushi, Thai cuisine, and drinks at Sushi Nagasaki, located in Kenmore. Check out the susherie's Facebook page for photos, hours, and more.
Sushi Nagasaki fuses the cylindrical sensations of sushi with the spicy servings of Thailand, creating an alluring Asian-cuisine mixture. Appease even the most cantankerous of tongue receptors with the eel-and-cucumber-stuffed dragon roll, the California roll crested with fish roe, or the spicy tuna hand roll twined with lettuce and cooling cucumber (all priced at $8.95). Thai creations such as the evil red curry ($7.75), a sinful mix of bamboo shoots, green beans, coconut milk, and basil leaves. Or try the less devious yellow curry ($7.75), a combination of savory Thai spices, potatoes, sweet potatoes, carrots, coconut milk, and onions that can readily fill torso purses with the sustenance needed to reach the paradoxically parallel high and low branches of the world tree. And the stir-fried broccoli ($7.75) places enough green stalks on your plate to create a micro-forest for a kind-hearted troll. All curries come with a choice of beef, chicken, pork, or shrimp for $1 extra.
The small, quaint comestible cabin that is Sushi Nagasaki prides itself on providing Buffalo denizens with tasty, aesthetically pleasing, pretention-free sushi. Ask the owners what they recommend, or close your eyes and point to an arbitrary spot on the menu and you're sure to land on something delicious, as long as you're careful not to land on the one spot that transports those who touch it to a nightmarish dimension where the sushi is always overcooked.
Dine-in only.
Reviews
Reviews are limited, but Sushi Nagasaki gets a three-star average from four polarized Google Mappers:
- Conventional & signature rolls
- Seasonal Thai menu
- Friendly, attentive service
The traditional method for preparing sushi requires slices of raw fish to be held over unlit fires in order to secure that signature “uncooked” flavor. Explore such innovative foodsmithing with today’s Groupon: for $7, you get $15 worth of sushi, Thai cuisine, and drinks at Sushi Nagasaki, located in Kenmore. Check out the susherie's Facebook page for photos, hours, and more.
Sushi Nagasaki fuses the cylindrical sensations of sushi with the spicy servings of Thailand, creating an alluring Asian-cuisine mixture. Appease even the most cantankerous of tongue receptors with the eel-and-cucumber-stuffed dragon roll, the California roll crested with fish roe, or the spicy tuna hand roll twined with lettuce and cooling cucumber (all priced at $8.95). Thai creations such as the evil red curry ($7.75), a sinful mix of bamboo shoots, green beans, coconut milk, and basil leaves. Or try the less devious yellow curry ($7.75), a combination of savory Thai spices, potatoes, sweet potatoes, carrots, coconut milk, and onions that can readily fill torso purses with the sustenance needed to reach the paradoxically parallel high and low branches of the world tree. And the stir-fried broccoli ($7.75) places enough green stalks on your plate to create a micro-forest for a kind-hearted troll. All curries come with a choice of beef, chicken, pork, or shrimp for $1 extra.
The small, quaint comestible cabin that is Sushi Nagasaki prides itself on providing Buffalo denizens with tasty, aesthetically pleasing, pretention-free sushi. Ask the owners what they recommend, or close your eyes and point to an arbitrary spot on the menu and you're sure to land on something delicious, as long as you're careful not to land on the one spot that transports those who touch it to a nightmarish dimension where the sushi is always overcooked.
Dine-in only.
Reviews
Reviews are limited, but Sushi Nagasaki gets a three-star average from four polarized Google Mappers: