These days, sushi isn't hard to find. That's because a pair of L.A. friends had a life-changing meal in 1965.
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[Essential California Newsletter] May 8, 2023
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[Click to view images]( photo of Noritoshi Kanai and Harry Wolff among a plethora of photos and documents kept by Marty Wolff and his family. (Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times) By Laura Blasey Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California [newsletter](. Itâs Monday, May 8. Iâm Laura Blasey, assistant editor for newsletters at The Times. Most of the time, youâll find me behind the scenes, editing Ryan Fonsecaâs work, reading your emails and keeping the little slice of internet we call Essential California running smoothly. Today, however, Iâm coming to you directly to talk about sushi â specifically, the story of L.A.âs delicious role in the industryâs American boom, which is [part of a larger Times project](. Itâs a story of friendship, cultural exchange, innovation and, of course, food that brought two people together, even if it ultimately broke them apart. Full disclosure: I was hungry when I picked this project to highlight. But perhaps you will be, too, when you finish reading. Maybe youâll even place a takeout order from your favorite restaurant. These days, sushi isnât hard to find in L.A. There are nearly a dozen Sugarfish locations. The city boasts eight Michelin-starred sushi restaurants. Then there are your smaller neighborhood spots offering traditional rolls and unique spins, like the vegan tasting menu I recently tried at a spot in Culver City. Iâve never been to Nobu, but Iâve [read enough celebrity gossip]( to feel like I have. It wasnât always that way. Even as Los Angelesâ cultural significance blossomed in the 1950s and â60s, the cityâs food scene remained decidedly homogeneous â meatloaf at your local dive, French cuisine if you were feeling fancy. The few Japanese restaurants that did open during this time catered to an American palate, [my colleague Daniel Miller writes in a new piece](. Sushi wasnât unheard of, but it wasnât Tokyo-style nigiri â the mounds of rice draped with delicate slices of mostly raw fish we know today. As Miller tells it, our story begins in Tokyo 1965. The setting: a family-run spot in the Ginza district called Shinnosuke. The mood: stressed and a little downbeat. Noritoshi Kanai, who managed an L.A. wholesaler of Japanese food products, was visiting the city with his friend and consultant Harry Wolff Jr. in hopes of finding a new product to introduce to customers in California. Kanaiâs early bets had been so successful, other companies had begun to import the same cookies and crackers and cut into his profits. The pair went out to dinner, inspiration running low, and Kanai chose a spot he knew Wolff would enjoy. For his open-minded palate, Wolff had a distinctly American upbringing. Daniel describes him as an imposing Jewish man whoâd cut his teeth as a bouncer in his native Chicago before he found a talent for salesmanship and became a unique partner to Kanai, a trim Japanese man whoâd served in the Japanese army. And enjoy it Wolff did: Daniel reports that when Kanai received a bill from the restaurant to his office a few days later, he was shocked by the figure â the equivalent of nearly $2,650 today. Wolff had enjoyed the plates of nigiri so much, he had been slipping away to feast in secret for days. And as he told Kanai, he suspected other Americans would love it, too. Daniel writes: âAn ambitious plan soon took shape. Mutual Trading would import the ingredients and implements needed to serve sushi here â from the nori to the knives.â The timing couldnât have been better for the pair: Recent innovations in shipping allowed them to safely import fish from Japan while a Japanese immigrant in Californiaâs Central Valley had [developed a new strain of medium-grain rice]( inspired by what was available in Japan and perfect for sushi. The final challenge, Daniel writes, was getting a restaurant in L.A. to sell sushi. The pair went for Little Tokyoâs Kawafuku â an influential spot that had opened in 1923 and hosted the cityâs biggest names in entertainment, sports and politics. Kawafukuâs sushi bar opened around 1965, and as Wolff had predicted, it was a hit. Other eateries in Little Tokyo added their own, and sushiâs popularity spread from there. California sushi chefs began to innovate even further in the following years â you can thank them for sushi boats and [the California roll](. For all the success that Kanai and Wolffâs idea generated, it also brought strain to their relationship. Wolff advised Kanai on commission, but as family told Daniel, the two men couldnât agree on how the sushi business should factor into their arrangement. Wolff walked away from the business and they never spoke again. Details on the abrupt break-up are sparse â neither man discussed the dispute with their families. Wolff died in 1996 and Kanai in 2017. Read Danielâs story here: [âHow two friends sparked L.A.âs sushi obsession â and changed the way America eats.â]( Thatâs just a taste of what there is to know about Los Angeles sushi. Here are a few other pieces from The Timesâ food team that I enjoyed: - What makes L.A.âs sushi scene so great? Restaurant critic Bill Addison [found answers in Tokyo](.
- How Koda Farms [created the perfect sushi rice]( in Californiaâs Central Valley.
- This Little Tokyo restaurant is long gone. [But it changed L.A.âs food scene forever](.
- Los Angeles is the epicenter of sushi in America. [Hereâs where â and how â to find the best](. And now, hereâs whatâs happening across California: Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. L.A. STORIES Should we call it a turf war? Bryan Michael Stoller had to do a double-take when he stepped outside his Studio City front door to walk his dog and saw a strip of bare earth. Thieves had made off with about 30 feet of artificial turf while he slept. And if the crime sounds odd, trying to warn others got just as weird. [Los Angeles Times]( POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT Restrictive border policy Title 42 ends this week, leaving an imprint on the future of asylum. The policy relied on pandemic public health orders and was used to block asylum seekers and other migrants from entering the United States. But though the orders are now expiring, Title 42âs effects will likely remain, including a large backlog of asylum seekers. [Los Angeles Times]( You may remember Ryanâs December [interview with Kamilah Moore]( chair of the Californiaâs Reparations Task Force. The group voted on Saturday to recommend that the state issue a formal apology for slavery and potentially provide billions of dollars in cash payments. Hereâs what that means. [Los Angeles Times]( CRIME, COURTS AND POLICING Cannabis workers face death and exploitation. Acknowledging growing concern over mistreatment, California regulators have quietly assembled a team to pursue cannabis labor exploitation in the stateâs burgeoning weed industry following a Times investigation. [Los Angeles Times]( A series of stabbings, two of them fatal, shook the sense of community in Davis, Calif., residents say. Police arrested Carlos Reales Dominguez, a former student at UC Davis, in connection with the stabbings. Dominguez [pleaded not guilty](. [Sacramento Bee]( Weeks after a cyberattack crippled the San Bernardino County Sheriffâs Department computer systems, county officials confirmed that the hackers had been paid a $1.1-million ransom. The ransomware attack, discovered in early April, forced the department to temporarily shut down some of its computer systems, including email, in-car computers and some databases. [Los Angeles Times]( Support our journalism [Subscribe to the Los Angeles Times.]( HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT [Two people walk through trunks of blackened trees with smoke rising from the ground.] Firefighters put out hotspots in a moonscape created by the Oak fire, near Mariposa, in July 2022.
(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times) This tribe was barred from cultural burning for decades â then a fire hit their community. Many experts point to a lack of regular, low-intensity fire that has caused wildfires in some California ecosystems to grow larger and more severe. And, in a cruel irony, Native Americans are among those most affected, they say. [Los Angeles Times]( CALIFORNIA CULTURE Experts say the impact of the current writersâ strike could surpass the 2007 work stoppage, which led consumers to spend less at shops and restaurants â even car dealerships took a hit. The cascading effects this time around could touch almost every facet of the economy in Southern California, including the housing market, and lead to economic fallout. [Los Angeles Times]( Theyâre all good boys, but one Sonoma County dog hopes to be crowned the best boy. Rafa, a 2-year-old, 100-pound Tibetan mastiff from Sonoma, is headed to the massive stage of the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show this week. âItâs kind of like watching your kids compete in sports,â his owner said. âAnd now heâs going to the World Series.â [Santa Rosa Press Democrat]( Free online games Get our free daily crossword puzzle, sudoku, word search and arcade games in our new game center at [latimes.com/games](. AND FINALLY Todayâs California memory is from Laura Shamas of Pacific Palisades, Calif., who nominates Big Creek Bridge in Big Sur, Calif. [A bridge spans the ocean-facing gap between two steep mountains.] At 589 feet long, the impressive Big Creek Bridge was built during the Great Depression.
(Laura Shamas) Laura writes: âMy husband and I love to drive Highway 1 on the Central Coast because itâs so spectacular. We try to do it once a year (when itâs open). Nine years ago, on a January day, I got a sunset photo of Big Creek Bridge on Highway 1, near the Big Sur area. The bridges on Highway 1 from Ragged Point to Monterey always amaze us â true feats of engineering.â If you have a memory or story about the Golden State, [share it with us](. (Please keep your story to 100 words.) Please let us know what we can do to make this newsletter more useful to you. Send comments to essentialcalifornia@latimes.com. ADVERTISEMENT
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