What will happen?
Seppuku
>>2Shinko-kun’s life can’t be replaced with just one thing!
If you do it on your own, there won’t be any good results.
The amount of peeled sea urchin is way too much.
>>5To peel this many sea urchins all by yourself… no matter how much of a pro Shota-kun is, it’s gotta be tough…
How many times will Shinboku get fired?
Even though I’m not at this level, when an incompetent person tries to be considerate, it often doesn’t just end up being a waste of effort; it can actually create more trouble, which feels quite relatable…
>>7So, for the incompetent, doing nothing is the optimal solution, isn’t it?
The more you try to be considerate, the more you expand the damage, so it’s best to just do what you’re told.
Well, it’s best not to hire someone that incompetent.
Tobio is capable, but…
Why don’t you know why sea urchin melts, you sushi apprentice…
>>10Your master—what a fool!!!
For some reason, I know how to peel it.
Are you going to run away and cause a suicide scare?
>>13When the seaweed roll couldn’t be cut.
The work itself can be done, so it’s not that they are incompetent.
There are indeed quite a few people who cannot even contemplate the outcome of doing that task.
I wish you would die.
The care to do things for others, the skill to properly peel away the shell, and the determination to accomplish things on your own are all amazing…
A master who doesn’t teach is a fool.
>>18Ah…!
Gasoline…
A workplace that doesn’t teach you what you’re definitely not supposed to do from the beginning is dangerous, isn’t it?
A man whose talent finally blossoms properly in the last episode.
>>23In the sequel, they are still treated as young hopefuls…
>>27Isn’t it strange that a young hope has significantly less achievement than their junior?
>>34Since Ooniji can participate in the rookie tournament, the range of young players is extremely wide.
>>38It seems that Oonoyama’s sushi career is relatively short…
>>38You might be young, but being surpassed continuously by those below you is not what it means to be a hope.
>>74Am I getting overtaken more and more?
The responsibility must ultimately rest with the management…
Hmm…
So, the two supervisors will go to apologize.
“That’s the basics of a sushi shop!”
It’s not something someone who teaches the basics of sushi should say.
If you say something like that, it becomes like this, doesn’t it?
Is it okay to place sea urchins in a room where the hot air from the air conditioner reaches, even if they are in their shells?
>>30Rather, it’s even more dangerous because it has various internals.
It is better to remove only the ovaries to minimize the damage.
While troublemakers are necessary for the story, concentrating them in one person…
I feel like it’s the side that can’t educate that is at fault.
However, you’re eating a ridiculous amount of sea urchin, Ozano-san… no wonder they’re a major client.
Isn’t it strange that whether we peel it right before or beforehand, the heat from the air conditioning is affecting the freshness in the kitchen?
Even Shinko will be able to stand at the betting table like that.
Aren’t you scared?
Do sushi restaurants usually have the air conditioning wind directly hitting the kitchen?
>>36It’s Hōzushi, that’s the master!
Why are you pointing the hot air from the air conditioner at me?
You’ll refrigerate it after peeling, right?
>>37Ah…!
The downside of the “learn by watching” principle is showing.
Hmm…
I think it’s not good to place raw foods in front of the air conditioner, even if it’s not sea urchin!
What should I do about someone who acts on their own without being told…?
Leaving sushi ingredients exposed to heat before going out is a matter for concern even before education.
Why aren’t you teaching the basics?
>>46Your master—is an idiot!!!
I passed the preliminary round of the competition using this sea urchin! I wonder if that means I’ve settled the score…
>>47Loyal customers are usually lost easily…
It’s only natural that I haven’t taught them, as it’s not their job in the first place.
For some reason, it’s a mystery why I can peel things.
>>48Did you learn by watching?
I remember it now, so it’s all good.
Learn by watching the master, but eventually, you’ll acquire the skills…!
Does this sushi restaurant not have a refrigerator?
An incompetent worker is… well, never mind.
Before worrying about the sea urchin, don’t leave the ingredients out at room temperature. You’re supposed to be an apprentice sushi chef, for crying out loud!
>>53Well, if Shinko hadn’t peeled it, it would have just been left in its shell.
>>58Ah…
Peeling may be silly and cause a big fuss, but the hot air from the air conditioner ruins any topic, which is why this is said.
I really feel a strong sympathy for Shinko-kun, don’t you?
>>59For your own good! For your own good!
Well, it wasn’t Shinko-kun who turned on the heating.
>>61I’m doing it as soon as I notice, so it’s hard to think about that.
“There is a saying that ‘after ten years of groundwork, you can finally be considered a professional.'”
I guess it’s because there were many people who took ten times longer than others to learn something in this profession.
It’s commendable that you are fulfilling your responsibilities properly.
>>62Old restaurants used to be
People from the struggling rural areas or those without a place in the city were working hard to seek a means of livelihood.
>>62You fundamentally misunderstand that finishing your groundwork means you can become independent and open your own shop, you know?
Of course, my cooking skills are important, but I also focus on management and attracting customers to create loyal customers who will come to my restaurant.
You need to build your network too.
If you’re going to do all of that, ten years is actually quite fast.
>>149It’s the first time I’ve heard that referred to as groundwork.
It’s stupid to leave the air conditioner on even with the shell on.
>>63In other words, it was Sho-ta’s mistake.
A shell that keeps freshness until the last moment.
The fact that people handling fresh food haven’t even thought about this is a bit concerning at a level expected in compulsory education.
Aren’t you usually not cooking?
>>66It seems like Shinko-kun isn’t being allowed to touch the ingredients much, huh?
>>66Well, in the case of sea urchins, if they’re not kept in a suitable environment, their insides end up melting weirdly and become inedible.
In reality, leaving perishable items unattended without putting them in the refrigerator is a matter that goes beyond teaching or not teaching.
>>67The person who left it alone was before Shinko.
>>67Freshly sourced shell-on sea urchins bought from the market, consumed the same day, so no refrigeration is needed.
>>87That’s not it.
Since Shinko-kun can’t even brew tea with a teapot.
If you wrap it in cling film and put it in the fridge…
I feel that there is a tendency to think that just because I struggled, the person below me must struggle just as much.
It’s difficult to educate someone when you have to consider that you need to tell them in advance not to unilaterally do things like peel sea urchins when they weren’t even asked to.
>>75It’s not just with sea urchin; you shouldn’t cook ingredients without permission.
>>75Well then, shall I prepare everything except for the sea urchin?
When is this serialization?
What are you complaining about in a manga from decades ago?
It’s almost always Shota who is solving troubles like this.
I always thought that the boss was just useless, right?
Hmm…
I wonder how many people Mr. Ozano was trying to entertain.
>>82Someone who wants to endlessly eat sea urchin like a certain sardine person.
Did you entertain them?
As a possibility, since it’s winter and a cold place, leaving it outside might be something small to medium could do.
The problem is the idiot who turned on the heating.
It gives the impression that it’s Shinko who was working there, doesn’t it?
The flavor is more stable in the box.
There are also performances where they peel the shell right in front of you.
Everything is ruined.
>>86Instead, should we dismantle Shinko-kun in front of the guests…?
It’s a legendary combination of a newcomer with a poor memory and a senior who is terrible at teaching.
The sushi restaurant that doesn’t teach is at fault.
This kind of business is going to fail because it’s outdated.
You match well with the master.
Well, if it’s Shinko-kun, he might just warm up his hands because they got cold…
>この始末…どうつけるんだよシンコ!!?There’s no way to do anything to Shinco by blaming like that.
I think there was an issue with leaving the sea urchin out in a place where the air conditioner is on.
>>95Looking at the sea urchin in the refrigerator.
Alright! I’ll peel all of this by myself while I have the chance!!
This guy does that.
>>117As expected, talk after seeing the thread image.
>>119It’s a character that will mess things up whether it’s outside the fridge or not.
>>127Isn’t it a bit strange to respond to a comment saying that leaving sea urchins in a place where the air conditioning is on is the fundamental problem?
>>130You’re so sharp that you can even understand the parts that aren’t drawn, just like Shinko-kun.
I feel like Mr. Saji’s burnt appearance reflects the bad aspects of Hōzushi, but I think Shinko-kun would be out of place no matter where he works.
>>96I feel like I was scolded for the sloppy way they mixed concrete at the construction site when I left.
>>100Rather, that workplace might have been better than the black sushi restaurant, don’t you think…?
I can’t do anything about not turning off the heating and leaving the peels outside…
Actually, Shota has also made the wasabi into a terrible quality by grating it beforehand.
Even if you said to teach me
I’ll teach you when it’s time for me to properly entrust the preparation of the sea urchin.
Shinko, who did something without being told or instructed, is 99% to blame.
Shinko itself has also improved the quality of the ingredients at Hōzushi, so there are times when it performs quite well.
Make a big blunder.
It might just be a mistake by the author for not including a switch to turn on the air conditioning before starting work.
If it’s this guy, it’s not surprising to forget to turn off the heater after turning it on.
>>102To be honest, everyone in that shop except for the owner and Ouma has potential.
Shota drops vinegar on the knife and just leaves it there.
>>102Don’t blame others, Komasa.
If I work for about 10 years without pay, I might be able to atone for it.
>>103Are you really going to keep such a useless person in the workplace for ten years?
Isn’t it at a level where you should teach this, like “Don’t put cats in the microwave”?
It’s because you say “learn by watching” that it ends up like this.
>>105I want to do good things with uni.
The mentor who didn’t teach me that raw food should not be left at room temperature.
I’m surprised that there are so many responses supporting Shinko-kun.
For example, when a new employee operates and breaks precision machinery on their own without anyone telling them, what happens then?
Are you saying that a workplace that doesn’t teach how to use precision machinery is at fault?
>>108The anonymous person probably feels more sympathy for the stupid and incompetent Shinko-kun than for the angry Komasa-san.
>>108I’m warning you not to touch it.
>>223I wasn’t told not to touch the computer in the president’s office, and I’ve never seen anyone being taught that.
Is it okay if I touch it freely?
Well, I think that being left in the heating without any extra measures has caused a decline in quality.
Shinko is indeed a stupid, foolish idiot.
But it’s the boss’s role to train that person and make them at least minimally useful.
“It’s understandable that even if you strive in education, it may not be of any help.”
“It’s reckless to say ‘I was educated, but I did something I shouldn’t have.'”
>>111Mmm…
Whether it’s trivia like being called Aristotle’s lantern or not, it feels like…
It’s a prejudice, but workplaces like this probably say things like “find the job yourself.”
Shota-kun is a reprint, but simply put, he has a short training period, so he makes ordinary mistakes around that area.
>>115Shinko only changes at most by half a year.
Moreover, Shota has been taught how to make sushi beforehand, so it would be strange if Shota couldn’t do it better.
In hot seasons, food poisoning is likely to happen regularly.
I think the reason Shinko-kun is Shinko-kun is because he has hardly devoted this amount of power into studying sushi, thinking it would be good.
Just stop it, right?
Even if you say that seeing and memorizing is bad…
The issue of learning by observation and touching ingredients on your own without asking anyone is a completely different matter.
This is a problem that goes beyond whether it’s good or bad; it’s about “learn by watching.”
The boss was trying to hide the fact that he killed someone by covering it up with delivery sushi.
>>126That was just the actor playing the boss role in another work…
>>126It’s a different world, so it’s safe.
In the first place, normally you wouldn’t blast the heating in the back kitchen.
If you fail after giving instructions, you might wonder what the supervisor is doing, but saying it was done without permission is just too sad…
What they’re saying is that the supervision is lacking.
If I go so far as to instruct you not to touch Shinko-kun at all, you’d probably complain about that too, right?
If there was a directive to peel the sea urchin, then you could say to let him know, but he’s doing it on his own!
Incompetent workers cause problems whether they’re given instructions or not.
I act independently without consulting, so it doesn’t matter whether there are instructions or not.
Doing this amount by myself is tough, so if I help you, you can do it alone and still have time to go collect the barrels.
Huh?
Don’t touch it in advance.
How many years has the manga been serialized?
>>138It doesn’t matter.
I want to fight using manga as a lure.
I don’t really know much about sea urchins.
If we had just removed the shell, wouldn’t the hot air from the air conditioner have been manageable?
To begin with, whether we assume it was ruined because of the air conditioner or it was all ruined because Shinko-kun peeled it, that’s a confirmed fact, isn’t it?
>>139That’s the shell for that purpose.
>>146It would be more dangerous to leave it as is in its shell.
>>156How bad is it?
>>159I don’t care.
>>162Learn by watching.
>>162Don’t you even know the basics of a sushi shop!?
>>159It would get stuck in your mouth if it’s still in the shell! Can’t you understand that!!
>>169Ah…!
>>159When in a shell, all parts of the sea urchin other than the gonads that are eaten are mixed together, so if they are left in an environment outside for more than just a few minutes, the sea urchin will die and the bitterness from the internal organs will affect the gonads.
>>173Of course I’m trying to make sure it doesn’t get damaged…
>>176Is it just left in the kitchen with the air conditioner on and no water put in?
>>179Where is that depiction?
>>187What is it, Shinko-kun?
>>187I don’t know who turned on the air conditioner, but for now, it’s just left in a basket, like what’s drawn in the thread image.
Clearly in a state of not being submerged in water.
>>198What on earth can you see…?
>>199Shinko Ai
>>199If you look with the eyes of your heart, you will be able to see it! Can’t you understand something like that?!!
>>173It’s something I just bought at the morning market…
>>159Since we don’t know the condition inside, there is a possibility that we can’t serve it to the customer.
>>175That’s why you check by peeling it right before.
>>139No good!
>>139The basic method for preservation is to soak it in salt water with the same concentration as seawater and store it in the refrigerator.
Well, it might be that when I came back after preparing to do that, there was a peeled sea urchin placed in front of the air conditioner.
Regarding the air conditioner, Shinko-kun doesn’t have the intelligence to turn it on.
It’s definitely someone who left it on, so Shinko-kun isn’t at fault…
>>140Well, there might be a time when the girls at the store teach me that I can just turn on the air conditioner when it’s hot or cold.
It’s unreasonable to blame the teacher for the mistakes when they are being criticized for doing things on their own without being instructed.
>>141It’s more of a system error than a human error.
You can’t read it unless you use your head like a magazine…
Aren’t you pushing Shot’s mistakes onto Shinko?
Did someone teach Shinko-kun the basics of sushi shops?
I understand the opinion that it wasn’t taught as a responsibility, but the fact that there was no instruction takes priority.
Learning with the help of AI is more efficient than memorizing by watching, as it eliminates the need for training time and improves time efficiency.
>>151In the case of AI, since it can only respond to what humans try to ask, mistakes like the one in the thread image might occur.
It’s understandable because it’s a manga tailored to the IQ of magazine readers.
Well, it seems that sushi restaurants don’t buy unpeeled sea urchin.
In the actual final match, both Saji and Shota-kun are buying pealed ones.
Perhaps there are others like me who have also had the experience of being unfairly criticized after not being properly trained at work, and that’s why they feel sympathy and are defending Shinko-kun.
Unless something really unusual happens, you don’t have to worry because it’s not a mistake at Shinko-kun’s level.
>>157When I was told to thoroughly master a “basic action” that I had neither seen nor heard of before, I was at a loss.
If I ask my senior, I’ll get scolded.
Oh, that’s right…!
I haven’t taught Shinko-kun to keep the biological samples in the refrigerator yet…!
What would normally happen… Getting fired is to be expected, but how much would the damages be?
Don’t you have a refrigerator or something?
I don’t know if it’s safe if you put it in the refrigerator after peeling it.
After all, it’s better for the incompetent not to do anything.
You only need to do what you are told in writing or by email.
It’s for times like these that you should keep your hair long.
If I usually have a buzz cut, I can’t apologize by shaving my head.
Regardless of what happens, if it is not peeled, the responsibility does not arise.
Yeah… it’s sweet! What are you snacking on?
>>177It’s like a labor fee.
>>177This alone is already a failing grade, right?
>>177I just licked what got on my fingers when I peeled it…
>>177Look closely, it’s the one that got on my finger.
It’s scary because Shinko-kun, who is at the level of being a complete idiot, might start repeating things since no one told him not to do it today.
This guy starts off with hair gel.
>>186That’s the worst, Shota… Working with hair product still in your hair…
It’s sad that Shinko-kun’s mistakes often stem from good intentions.
I can’t start peeling after licking my fingertips.
Even traditional craftsmen can become troublemakers at the level of Shinko-kun.
It seems like they probably teach you whether you like it or not by hitting you regularly, saying “Don’t do that, you fool!”
It can only be described as the convenience of the manga.
I kind of dislike sushi restaurants with heating.
>>192I’d rather not have to eat sushi while shivering in the winter…
>>192It’s mid-winter, you know…
The average temperature in Tokyo in the middle of winter 30 years ago was 10℃.
Don’t peel something if you don’t know when you’ll use it…
>>194I must have seen you peeling it right before you use it all the time, but instead, I’m preparing it for you.
Even though I didn’t know, it’s too scary to start doing something I don’t usually do.
The main point is that without instruction and knowledge, I touched important ingredients on my own and ruined them.
The argument that it was already bad from the start due to the air conditioning is just shifting the point.
I think it’s more likely that they turned it back on without permission since they’re upset about the air conditioning being on.