
International Sushi Day: 7 Varieties You Need To Taste
Muskan Kalra
Jun 18, 2025
It is a Western-style roll with rice on the outside and seaweed inside. Perfect for beginners or sushi newbies.
It is a hand-pressed rice topped with a slice of fish or seafood (like tuna, salmon, or shrimp). And try it if you enjoy clean, simple flavors and fresh seafood.
It is a Sushi rice and fillings (like fish, veggies, or egg) rolled in seaweed (nori) and sliced and popular variations are tuna roll, cucumber roll, avocado roll.
It is a cone-shaped hand roll with seaweed on the outside and rice/fillings inside. It looks like a sushi taco! Great for casual eating.
It is a thinly sliced raw fish or seafood served without rice. Try salmon, tuna, or yellowtail sashimi to appreciate the raw fish itself.
It is a bowl of sushi rice topped with assorted sashimi and garnishes and great for a filling, deconstructed sushi experience.
It is a sweet, layered Japanese omelet served over sushi rice and bound with seaweed. It is a kid-friendly, Mild, slightly sweet, and non-fishy. Read Next Story

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Time of India
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"It might just be a matter of time before even more Chinese brands become globally recognisable," Yang said. - TikTok effect - Through viral exports like Labubu, China is "undergoing a soft-power shift where its products and image are increasingly cool among young Westerners," said Allison Malmsten, an analyst at China-based Daxue Consulting. Malmsten said she believed social media could boost China's global image "similar to that of Japan in the 80s to 2010s with Pokemon and Nintendo". Video app TikTok -- designed by China's ByteDance -- paved the way for Labubu's ascent when it became the first Chinese-branded product to be indispensable for young people internationally. Joshua Kurlantzick from the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) told AFP that "TikTok probably played a role in changing consumers' minds about China". 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While plush toys alone might not translate into actual power, the United States' chaotic global image under the Trump presidency could benefit perceptions of China, the University of Maryland's Yang said. "The connection many make between the seeming decline of US soft power and the potential rise in China's global image may reflect how deeply intertwined the two countries are in the minds of people whose lives are impacted by both simultaneously," she told AFP. At the very least, Labubu's charms appear to be promoting interest in China among the younger generation. "It's like a virus. Everyone just wants it," Kazakhstani mother-of-three Anelya Batalova told AFP at Pop Mart's theme park in Beijing. Qatari Maryam Hammadi, 11, posed for photos in front of a giant Labubu statue. "In our country, they love Labubu," she said. "So, when they realise that the origin of Labubu is in China, they'd like to come to see the different types of Labubu in China."


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Time of India
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