Teppanyaki-style Japanese restaurant on board Wonder of the Seas

One of Royal Caribbean’s most popular restaurants, Izumi Teppanyaki will feature on the new Wonder of the Seas, when she joins the fleet as the world’s largest cruise ship in 2022.

Chef Travis Kamiyama confirmed via social media over the weekend that his specialty sushi and hibachi restaurant will be one of the more than 20 dining options on board the largest Oasis Class ship.

The chef shared an old video of an Izumi Hibachi & Sushi restaurant on Allure of the Seas in 2017 on his personal Facebook page and said: “We have four Izumi Sushi and Teppanyaki on Oasis Class. Fifth one on the way on Wonder of the Seas next year”.

Sometimes referred to as a Japanese Steakhouse, and made famous by Benihana restaurants, the teppanyaki-style restaurant combines cooking and service into a culinary performance.

The other four Oasis Class ships dedicate half the restaurant to sushi and half to hibachi. However, newer Izumi locations provide more space for the hibachi side, a slight move away from the traditional sushi. It has not been confirmed which layout the Wonder of the Seas restaurant will follow.

Wonder of the Seas floated out on September 5 and is currently undergoing the fitting out process in which her interior spaces are being built and furnished.

On completion she will have capacity for more than 6,360 passengers, claiming the title of world’s largest cruise ship from her sister ship Symphony of the Seas by more than 800 passengers.

The debut date has not yet been confirmed since Royal Caribbean announced  that would be a delay of the planned 2021 maiden voyage. She will be setting sail to China for voyages from Shanghai in 2022.

Related
Norwegian Sun cruise ship sailing on the water

Norwegian Cruise Line cancelled 38 cruises including South Pacific voyages

Norwegian Cruise Line has cancelled around five months of cruises across three ships – equating to nearly 40 itineraries.
Woman on a cruise ship upset about her cruise

Laura’s cruise was swapped from the sunny South Pacific to Hobart – she got her money back and so can you

It's one of the biggest legal dilemmas in cruise: if the itinerary changes, are you entitled to compensation?
The Royal Princess.

Royal Princess’ ‘partial turnaround’ may bring $568,000 to Hobart – could this be the solution to our regional cruise woes?

In a first for Princess Cruises and Tasmania, a partial turnaround cruise on Royal Princess was operated to Hobart, meaning passengers could start and end their cruise in Tasmania, even though the larger itinerary starts and ends in different ports. ... Read more
The Pacific Explorer cruise ship.

Class Action alleges cruise lines use ‘predatory behaviour’ to lure passengers into racking up casino debts

Carter Capner Law is opening a class-action against Carnival Corporation due to alleged predatory gambling practices.