Nori is one kind of edible seaweed used in Japanese cookery.
No, sushi is a type of Japanese dish, but it does contain seaweed.
Yes, they use a certain type of seaweed called nori which comes in sheet form so they could roll the ingredients into it.
dried nori,sometimes smoked salmon,fish eggs
The seaweed used for sushi is called nori. It is processed seaweed made into sheets. It is very crispy when fresh.
The sea
Seaweed can be used in many different styles and types of dishes. Seaweed can be used in salads, soups, substitutions for other things in a recipe, sushi, risotto, rice dishes, mixed veggies and many more as well as unique creations can be made with seaweed.
Not all sushi is wrapped. The ones that are (eg. ,makimono or gunkan-maki) are wrapped in seaweed. Modern interpretations may use beancurd skin, crepes, seaweed flakes, sesame seeds and other ingredients. Certain types of sushi eg. temarizushi or nigirizushi don't require wraps at all.
The seaweed used in sushi-wrapping is called "nori." For more information on nori, click on the View Discussion button.
Hippophae rhamnoides
They roll sushi in many things. The most common thing used is seaweed and crabmeat. That would be your center, then rice and depending on the type of sushi different seasonings go on top. The California roll for example has sesame seeds on top of the rice. Any kind of fish can potentially become sushi.
Seaweed, Rice and raw fish.
Sushi is normally wrapped in nori, a green seaweed. There are items sold in some sushi places that are wrapped in a translucent material. This is rice paper and is edible, though it is not traditionally used in sushi.
Nori is an edible seaweed used in the preparation of sushi or onigiri. The seaweed is essentially a wrapper for these dishes.
Nori (a.k.a. laver) is a paper like, edible, toasted seaweed used in most kinds of sushi. The nori is actually the part that holds the sushi together.
red algae
Not normally. It is usually wrapped in Nori, a dried processed seaweed.
Rice, Nori (seaweed), tuna, salmon, roe, eel, and many more.