Home Recipes Reviews Events About Contact

from cupcakes to cushions: weird and wonderful sushi creations.


Sushi cupcakes? Sound a bit fishy to me. But don’t worry, these tantalising treats only contain the holy grail ingredients of baking. Lots of sugar, butter icing and food colouring. Switch wasabi for whipped cream and you have all you need for a seafood (but not calorie) free Japanese inspired cupcake.


Whoever made this knitted sushi platter must really be noodles about needles. Most people would say you’d have to be pretty dedicated to sushi to even make it to eat, but it seems this crocheted creation was made just for fun. Alongside this on the website are knitted hot cross buns, carrot cake, plum pudding and even a box of a dozen eggs. One may even wonder if the creator used chopsticks for knitting needles.


So guess which celebrity is donning this sushi playsuit? It could only be Katy Perry, the same diva who has been known to wear a Christmas tree dress, a ferris wheel skirt and a fried egg outfit. This embroidered ensemble was put together by designer duo Phillipe and David Blond for her 2009 MTV Awards appearance. Of course, she completed the look with a pair of fishnets...

For those who eat, breathe and sleep sushi, these hand stitched sushi cushions don’t seem all that unusual. Sushi-aholics have a whole of menu of nigri, California rolls and even a soy sauce pillow case to dream about. Can’t find your favourite tuna tempura dragon roll with extra wasabi on their website? Don’t worry, they are open to custom creations at: www.theoriginalsushipillow.com


2 comments:

  1. I was stuck on a delayed train in the UK and, out of pure boredom, opened a list of new casino sites. One of the comments pointed to Milky Wins and praised the variety of games, so I gave it a go from my phone. The early spins were nothing special; small wins, slow decline. I told myself I’d stop at a certain number and was only a couple of pounds away when a bonus finally dropped. It wasn’t massive, but it pushed me back into profit. I shut the app immediately and spent the rest of the ride peacefully scrolling memes.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I’m in the UK, and I’ve got a boring rule before I trust any casino with even a small deposit: I check the contact page first. If it’s hidden, vague, or feels like it was written by a robot that hates humans, I usually back out. I found this one after a mate in Bristol sent me a “try something new tonight” message (he always does that right when I’m tired and most likely to make dumb decisions). I browsed around, liked the game layout, then deliberately went hunting for the practical stuff. Midway through my scroll I opened https://mad-casino1.com/contacts/ and it instantly felt more reassuring than a lot of sites I’ve tried: clear enough to know where to go if something goes sideways, not just a mystery form that vanishes into a void. I didn’t have a crisis, but I did have a small question about a promo condition, and I wanted to see if getting help would be a hassle. It wasn’t — I got the info I needed without a whole interrogation. After that I played a short session, hit a rough patch, almost closed it in a mood, then a decent run landed and I finished slightly up. What made me satisfied was the combination: I could actually find support routes quickly, and the session stayed under control instead of turning into a frustrating chase.

    ReplyDelete