Critics have argued that such intimacy risks nostalgia — an aestheticization of home cooking that flattens complexity into quaintness. Sometimes that’s true: nostalgia can be a filter that obscures real labor. But where this omakase succeeds is in refusing easy sentimentality. The mother-daughter team acknowledges the labor, both emotional and physical, of feeding a family, then reframes it with rigor. The mother’s stock is not a relic; it is tested for clarity and balance like any fine consommé. The daughter’s plating is not an Instagram backdrop; it’s the result of trials that judge the bowl by the sum of its parts. Together they produce something that honors lineage without fossilizing it.