I just returned from a fantastic culinary experience with Sushi Mike at Tanoshii. It was Monday, and slower (but not empty). This allowed Mike to spend the evening with us, talking about his technique, the freshness and quality of his fish, and he served us some extraordinary sushi, appetizers, and a pleasant dessert.
To start, I'll say dining at the counter with Sushi Mike is the way to go. Sitting at a table would be fine, but the best experience comes from sitting with the chef himself and getting to know his food, along with his personality. He is passionate about what he does, and it shows in his attention to detail, freshness of his product, and his theory that soy sauce should be used sparingly. Within 5 minutes of being seated, and discussing our first course - he told me he was going to make sure we didn't have to put soy sauce on anything. This was refreshingly, and I can appreciate the theory that adding a lot of sauce to an already perfect dish would ruin it. In my industry, BBQ, I adhere to the same standard - the best BBQ doesn't need any sauce.
Back to sushi. We opted for the Mike special. You select a type of fish, and Mike comes up with something creative - off the menu - just for you. He asked your likes, dislikes, spice tolerance, etc. and custom makes a roll for you. I had never experienced this before, so it was fun. Not a mind-blowing concept, but fun nonetheless.
Here's a pic of the menu description, and some of the ingredients you can select:

He suggested we started with fish N' Chips. This was a disc shaped mold he made in front of us, presented it for our approval, then spread/mixed the layers together and topped a freshly fried wonton triangle. The layers were tomato mixture (fresh diced tomato, onion, fresh cilantro, salt, pepper), avocado, tuna, topped with fresh Tobiko (flying fish eggs). Here's the initial presentation:

He then squeezes a fresh lemon wedge over the dish, mixes around the ingredients - and tops your wonton.

He personally serves you from behind the counter, and as you reach for a plate and chopsticks, he gently says "no, just your hands. This is fun food".
Small details, such as this ,show me he has a specific goal for our experience. He directs the whole production, including consumption instructions.
After the appetizer, he started making our "Mike's Special" roll. We had requested he make the roll with Hamachi, which he told us was flown in that morning.
The roll was fantastic, was made fresh, and I can't tell you all that was in it - but it was delicious. I could taste the freshness of the fish, the rice was cooked perfectly, and the light sauce Mike applied complemented the other flavors nicely.


We were sharing, and my wife said to me as I reached for the last bite..."chivalry is dead, isn't it" - which was her passive aggressive way of saying "hands off, that last piece is mine!". I had already decided we'd order another special roll, so I happily obliged.

Mike mentioned the Big Eye tuna was really good, so I had him make our next roll with it....


Again, delicious, fresh - good quality fish. We talked with Mike for a bit, had some wine, then it came up that own a BBQ restaurant so we talked "shop" for awhile. He had the server bring out some saki for us - served at room temperature. I am not a saki expert, but this was a nice tasting saki - and the offering was appreciated (it was from Mike's personal stash, this is a BYOB shop).
To finish, Mike offered us asian pears lightly kissed with truffled honey. I hadn't experienced truffled honey before, and it was quite pleasant. The dish was sweet, slightly tart, and the truffle flavor complemented nicely.

Overall it was a very pleasant evening. 4 courses, $60, BYO wine, nice conversation with a passionate artist doing his thing.
I really appreciate what Mike does, and think the experience he provides is unique and exceeded my expectations for service and quality.
Thanks Mike, keep up the good work.
Tanoshii
5547 N. Clark
(773) 878-6886