[MICHELIN GUIDE JAPAN] Tokyo 1 Stars MICHELIN Unagi / Freshwater Eela Cuisine (2)

Nodaiwa Azabu Iikura Honten

  • 1-5-4 Higashiazabu, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 160-0044, Japan
  • ¥¥ · Unagi / Freshwater Eel

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Iwajiro founded this restaurant at the end of the Edo period; 5th-generation Kanejiro Kanemoto keeps alive the family culinary legacy. Edo-style kabayaki, which adds a steaming process to the grilling, is fragrant and tender; it’s served on Wajima lacquer ware, and the sophisticated flavour goes well with the salty sauce. The shirayaki eloquently expresses the gratitude of this long-established restaurant to the customers who’ve supported it over the years.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card
 +81 3-3583-7852
 http://www.nodaiwa.co.jp

Ishibashi

  • 2-4-29 Suido, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, 112-0005, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Unagi / Freshwater Eel

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Ishibashi has carried on the same traditions over four generations, since its foundation in 1910. The chef doesn’t start cutting the unagi until the customer is seated, and steams it before grilling, in the Kanto style. The caramel-coloured unagi richly encapsulates the charm of Edo culinary culture. We recommend the Tokujo (Deluxe), which packs generous amounts of unagi into a traditional stacking box. A full range of snacks includes pickles marinated in well-aged rice bran, and honesenbei.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • Cash only
  • Notable sake list
  • Shoes must be removed

+81 3-3813-8038

http://unagi-ishibashi.com/

[MICHELIN GUIDE JAPAN] Tokyo 1 Stars MICHELIN Tempura Cuisine (11)

Tempura Miyashiro

  • 2-18-11 Kamimeguro, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 153-0051, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Tempura

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

The restaurant is a remodelled old house built 100 years ago. Its blue walls are meant to evoke the ocean, reflecting Naoaki Miyashiro’s love of surfing. While he has many years of experience in Japanese cuisine, his tempura skills are self-taught, and his ideas aren’t bound by standard practices. The shrimp tempura wrapped in nori is seasoned with tendon sauce and builds upon tenmusu (a rice ball wrapped in nori filled with deep-fried tempura shrimp).

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6452-2808

https://www.miyashiro.tokyo/

 

Tempura Motoyoshi

  • 3F, 2-8-11 Ebisunishi, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, 150-0021, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Tempura

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

The fruits of Motoyoshi’s curiosity are apparent in his tempura. Shrimp comes in two types of coating, which you can taste and compare. The light batter is seasoned with salt, while tentsuyu complements the thick batter. Fatty hairtail and Spanish mackerel are deep-fried to evoke a grilled aroma. Onions and lotus root are left to sit till they reach the right temperature for optimum sweetness. Motoyoshi deftly manipulates batter thickness and flame heat to call forth a cornucopia of flavours.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

 +81 3-6455-0200

https://motoyoshi-1120.com

Ten Yokota

  • 2F, 3-10-5 Motoazabu, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 106-0046, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Tempura

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Shogo Yokota learned his skills from his father. While keeping to Edomae technique, he also pursues new frontiers. Using sesame oil for frying, and never failing to include ingredients like Shiba shrimp and anago are customs of old. He maintains a harmony between orthodoxy and respect for tradition, on the one hand, with creativity in pursuit of new tastes, on the other. The hanging scroll with the phrase ‘fluidity and immutability’ at the entrance is an expression of this.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6721-0404

https://www.ten-yokota.com

Tempura Maehira

  • 4F, 2-8-16 Azabujuban, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 106-0045, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Tempura

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

A unique touch here is owner-chef Tomokazu Maehira’s use of two different oils. For white-fleshed fish and squid, he adds roasted oil to complement the light flavour, and for strong-flavoured items like uni and young ayu, he uses a balance of light oil and sesame oil to achieve flavour harmony. The rice dishes are given a seasonal touch based on Japanese culinary ideas, such as clam tencha with starchy sauce in spring and mixed tai and mizansho tempura in the autumn.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6435-1996

Kyobashi Tempura Fukamachi

  • 2-5-2 Kyobashi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0031, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Tempura

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Masao Fukamachi has been walking the path of the chef for half a century. He adjusts the batter for each type of tempura, concentrating his experience in practiced movements as he manages two cooking pots. As he heats uni wrapped in oba, he enhances its fragrance and draws out the umami, demonstrating his formidable skills. Supporting the owner-chef are his two sons. Heirs to his expertise in Edomae cooking, the two young men are following in their father’s footsteps.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-5250-8777

Seiju

  • B1F, 3-16-9 Tsukiji, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0045, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Tempura

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Yoshiaki Shimizu upholds the traditions of Edomae tempura, with his focus on seafood and use of high temperature oil for frying. He uses freshly pressed sesame oil and brings out the flavours of the ingredients with a light batter. He spares no effort to ensure that the oil is as fresh and fragrant as can be, changing it regularly. Clams, raw uni and figs are seasonal ingredients he strove to perfect his kitchen techniques for by himself, and form part of what he offers.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Particularly interesting wine list
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-3546-2622

Tempura Shimomura

  • 1-11-13 Misuji, Taito-ku, Tokyo, 111-0055, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Tempura

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Ukiyo-e wood-block prints of scenes featuring tempura convey the elegance that charmed the people of Edo. To encourage diners to drop by casually, dishes such as shrimp-and-scallop kakiage and vegetable tendon are served at lunchtime. In the evening, the chef displays his talents with full-fledged, authentic tempura cuisine as set menus. Tilefish delights with the contrast between its fragrant scales and delicate flesh. Sweet potato drizzled in brandy is inspired by marrons glacés.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-5809-2866

Shunkeian Arakaki

  • 3-5-10 Minato, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0043, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Tempura

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Chef Kaname Arakaki leverages his experience to combine tempura with dishes from general Japanese cuisine. As is the tradition in kaiseki cuisine, he starts with tsukuri, soup and grilled items. The shrimp legs are grilled, together with the head, and served as a snack, all in keeping with his way of doing things. Bigfin reef squid legs are wrapped in oba. No effort is spared, with touches such as putting fragrant shrimp shells in the dashi for the tencha.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 90-7716-4125

Tempura Yaguchi

  • 2-9-7 Nihombashiningyocho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 103-0013, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Tempura

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

The sound of the flame and the heat haze above the oil seem to lure the tempura ingredients in. Kazuki Yaguchi fries the tempura as if making it swim in the high-temperature pan. His focus on seafood is to convey the true charm of Edomae tempura. He also serves shrimp and squid, but the main emphasis is on the three pillars of Edomae tempura: sillago, big-eyed flathead and anago. The meal flows naturally from lighter to stronger tasting ingredients.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-3527-3701

Edomae Shinsaku

  • 6F, 2-10-11 Nihombashiningyocho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 103-0013, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Tempura

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

A book by a tempura master changed Shinsaku Nishimura’s life. Frequenting the author’s restaurant, he was inspired by how the chef’s character was manifested in his tempura. Nishimura speaks of the Maillard reaction, in which food becomes fragrant as it turns a golden brown. Frying at low temperatures, bringing each ingredient to a mellow finish, is a Nishimura trademark. His spirit of inquiry never flags as he seeks out quality ingredients and hones his techniques.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Notable sake list
  • Visa credit card
+81 3-5615-8728
https://shinsaku.tokyo

Nihombashi Sonoji

  • 2-22-11 Nihombashiningyocho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 103-0013, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Tempura

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

As suggested by the phrase ‘Finish with soba after tempura’ on the entrance curtain, this restaurant offers omakase that starts with tempura and ends with soba. The tempura ingredients include seafood and vegetables from the owner-chef’s home prefecture of Shizuoka. In winter, the menu, uniquely, also includes game. It’s great how the soba comes with Suruga Bay sakura ebi kakiage. Enjoy two dishes that developed in Edo, here at this dapper restaurant.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-5643-1566

http://www.sonoji.info/

[MICHELIN GUIDE JAPAN] Tokyo 1 Stars MICHELIN Sushi Cuisine (22)

Hato

  • 5-7 Kagurazaka, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, 162-0825, Japan
  • ¥¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Daichi Kumagiri’s ideas make waves and the Kagurazaka Ishikawa restaurant, which operates Hato, rides on the current of sushi. Shuko, interweaving grilled with deep-fried items, is served kaiseki-style. Sushi merges with other disciplines of Japanese cuisine here, erasing the boundaries between them. The type of vinegared rice used varies by dish, and sushi toppings are deftly sliced. Following the principles of Japanese fare, this unique sushi brings out the honest flavour of the ingredients.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 50-3138-5225

Sushi Kojima

  • 5F, 7-3-8 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0061, Japan
  • ¥¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Michio Kojima describes himself as a sushi artisan with a 20th century Showa-era mentality. As such, he prepares sushi with fish floss sandwiched between rice and either a gizzard shad or tiger prawn topping and makes tamago-yaki with Shiba shrimp broth. By visiting Toyosu market every morning, he has built a relationship with wholesalers. Testament to this is his selection of first catch produce, such as very young gizzard shad, which are at the apex of the sushi fish hierarchy.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6264-6464

Sushi Murayama

  • 5F, 7-6-2 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0061, Japan
  • ¥¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Daisaku Murayama spent much of his apprenticeship studying Japanese cuisine rather than sushi specifically, and his experience with kaiseki shines in his side dishes. After fried foods and dishes served in bowls, the meal ends with a vinegared dish. The nigiri toppings are prepared Edomae style, and generally served in the order squid, zuke-maguro, chu-toro and o-toro. Expect classics such as gizzard shad and tiger prawn with minced Shiba shrimp and modern treats like eggs with maple syrup.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6263-8295

Sushi Kuwano

  • 3F, 8-7-6 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0061, Japan
  • ¥¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Each morning Tatsuya Kuwano goes hunting for sushi toppings in the Toyosu fish market. Every night Sushi Kuwano has the feel of a dinner party. He serves his snacks according to his own peculiar rhythm; when the customers have settled, the nigiri starts to appear. In spring, it begins with a shuko of noresore, or young conger eel and ends with nigiri of anago, conger eel, telling of the interconnectedness of life. Fish is even used in the tamago-yaki, with minced hamo in summer and cod in winter.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-3573-6577

Edomae Sushi Hanabusa

  • 9-1-7 Akasaka, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 107-0052, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

“Everything begins with tuna and ends with tuna.” Hideki Nakajima learned this old-school Tokyo way of doing things from a sushi shop that was heir to skills dating from the Edo period. The nigiri starts with toro, is followed by seafood from Tokyo Bay, with tekkamaki (tuna roll) at the end. The fan-shaped nigiri is a technique seared into his memory from watching his mentor’s handiwork. Vinegared toppings and nitsume accommodate modern tastes while advancing the evolution of this tradition.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-3478-1010

https://www.akasaka-hanabusa.jp/

Sushi Hashimoto

  • 1-8-2 Shintomi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0041, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

One MICHELIN Star: High quality cooking, worth a stop!

Hiroyuki Hashimoto, whose father was also a sushi chef, trained at sushi restaurants in Tokyo. The omakase starts with snacks, showing just how well he was trained. Standard items in the elaborate shuko include chawanmushi and vinegared rice with seafood. The sushi is prepared according to authentic Edomae technique, the rice seasoned with akazu and the toppings larger in size. Starting out with gizzard shad is also a mark of his training.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card
+81 3-5541-5578

Sushi Ichijo

  • 3-1-3 Higashinihombashi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 103-0004, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Satoshi Ichijo was still a boy when he set his sights on a career in sushi. Doted on by the workers at the sushi place his mother worked at, little Satoshi was drawn to the way the sushi chefs comported themselves, full of humanity and kindness. Ichijo’s artisanal skills shine in the gizzard shad marinated in vinegar, lightly seasoned and simmered anago and tamago-yaki prepared with Shiba shrimp. He forms his sushi from akazu-seasoned rice, inheriting a culture handed down from his predecessors.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Cash only – lunch
  • Counter dining
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6661-1335

 

Sushi Ryujiro

  • 2-11-11 Minamiaoyama, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 107-0062, Japan
  • ¥¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Ryujiro Nakamura is sincere in his approach to his work. His spirited shouts and the gentle attitude with which he responds to customer requests make for a feel-good atmosphere. He puts the most effort into the bluefin tuna, which he says is the centrepiece of sushi. Another appealing characteristic is how the flavours change with the season. The use of warm rice brings out the flavours. His training shows through in his hospitality.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6384-5865

Takagakino Sushi

  • 1-30-2 Nihombashikakigaracho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 103-0014, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Hanging on an old house on a Ningyocho alley is the unobtrusive shop curtain for Takagakino Sushi. This is what Edomae sushi places often used to look like. Customers sit shoulder to shoulder at the cramped, six-seat counter. Each sushi piece is composed of vinegared rice, enlivened by a little salt, with a properly aged topping. Permeated with the Edomae style and practice of sushi, Takagakino Sushi is popular with connoisseurs.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6231-0923

Sushi Keita

  • 6-6-4 Tsukiji, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0045, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Owner-chef Keita Aoyama treasures the Edomae cuisine skills he acquired through apprenticeships in Hokkaido and Tokyo. Fish floss is sandwiched between rice and either gizzard shad or prawn. Nitsume-coated anago is rich and flavoursome. Mindful of the simple joy of filling one’s cheeks, the nigiri are generously portioned. Sushi toppings are cut thick and paired with akazu-seasoned rice. Tamago-yaki with Shiba shrimp wraps up the meal. Polished skills are evident in every dish.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted

+81 3-6264-2234

Sushi Masashi

  • 5F, 2-12-27 Kitaaoyama, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 107-0061, Japan
  • ¥¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Masashi Yamaguchi says he wants a sushi meal to tell an enjoyable story, with a beginning, twists and turns, and an ending. In his training, he learned how to vary the tempo of sushi using sweet and sour and hot and cold toppings. Taking classic techniques, he has further developed his own style. For example, he marinates the kobujime in kombu dashi and adds flavour to get a soft texture. His originality can be seen, too, in snacks like the tuna sukiyaki.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6384-5526

Nishiazabu Taku

  • 2-11-5 Nishiazabu, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 106-0031, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Takuya Sato returned to Tokyo after experiencing making sushi in Hawaii. He realised that the high quality of Japanese seafood was a blessing due to the care with which Japanese fishermen handle their catch. Grateful for the bounty of the environment, he exercises his talents to capture the full flavour of each morsel. He’ll also win over diners with astute wine and sake pairings. The unpredictability of the evening’s flow adds a dimension of fun.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Particularly interesting wine list
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-5774-4372

https://nishiazabu-taku.com/

Sushiya Shota

  • 3-3-10 Azabujuban, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 106-0045, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Chef Moon Kyung Hwan was inspired by the lead character in a sushi manga. Dreaming of forming sushi by hand, he journeyed to Japan from his native South Korea. His earnestness in studying Japanese and sushi technique at the same time earned him the nickname ‘Shota’, the name of the protagonist in that manga. He frequently visits Toyosu to build trust with wholesalers and pours his heart into sushi-making. His negima soup is a tribute to the food-stall culture of Edo.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6722-6588

Nishiazabu Sushi Shin

  • 4-18-20 Nishiazabu, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 106-0031, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Shintaro Suzuki was fascinated with Edomae cuisine and taught himself. He adds a touch of creativity to how he presses the sushi and adds chopped kinome to kobashira and ume-flavoured soy sauce to sardines – there’s a uniqueness in how he incorporates both classic and new ideas. It’s said that by thirty you can stand on your own two feet, and that by forty you no longer have any doubts – it’ll be interesting to follow his evolutionary path.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • Counter dining

+81 3-5485-0031

http://sushi-shin.com/

Jukuseizushi Yorozu

  • 3F, 4-6-5 Higashi, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, 150-0011, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Akira Shirayama is an advocate of “mature sushi”. He uses three methods to mature the seafood: fermentation, drying and salt curing. Low-temperature maturing enhances the flavour via the action of enzymes; drying removes the moisture from the fish; and salt curing draws out the umami of amino acid by breaking down proteins. Akazu-seasoned rice creates harmony with the toppings and cooking it firm means more chewing so that it combines with the thick-cut toppings.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 50-5357-2320

Sushi Matsuura

  • 5-7-8 Shirokane, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 108-0072, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Starting with tuna noten (the meat just above the head) wrapped in nori leaves an impression and speaks of Osamu Matsuura’s confidence in his eye for tuna. Just as many fish are called by different names as they grow, he started out as a fishmonger. He also worked in renowned restaurants overseas, which he draws on here. He does not serve standard Edomae nigiri, as he prefers to show toppings of the season. Clam in spring and saury in the autumn herald a change of season.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6450-2557

Oku

  • 3-42-11 Asakusa, Taito-ku, Tokyo, 111-0032, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

You can tell a lot about Katsuji Oku from the way he works. When first-timers arrive, he bids them sit close to his work counter, so he can make them feel at home with some conversation. Painstakingly prepared snacks and gracefully shaped sushi also speak volumes about his character. Staple snacks include grilled marinated fish on small beds of rice, chawanmushi and sardine wrapped in nori. To express his individuality, he greets customers by serving gizzard shad as the first nigiri offering.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6802-4474

Takumi Sushi Owana

  • 4F, 1-17-17 Ebisuminami, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, 150-0022, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Snacks and nigiri are served in alternating fashion, and rice seasoned with either akazu or white vinegar is used depending on the topping. Kenji Oana adds his own touch to techniques learned from his mentor. For example, nigiri of monkfish liver and watermelon pickled in sake lees was the speciality at the restaurant where he trained, but he calls it ‘Ebisu-style’ and wraps it in nori. At lunch, he leaves the sushi-pressing to his apprentice for training purposes.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-5725-2020

Jizozushi

  • 2F, 3-18-5 Shirokanedai, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 108-0071, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Nigiri sushi was born out of Edo culture and Takeda pursues traditional Edomae technique. Not getting caught up in the trends of today, he focuses on nigiri and does not serve snacks. He observes classical methods for preparing the toppings and has nitsume for the anago and boiled clams. He follows the standard flow, starting with light-flavoured squid and white-fleshed fish and ending with kanpyo-maki. Enjoy the sushi and the owner-chef’s sophistication.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-3445-5301

Sushi Takamitsu

  • 1-28-2 Aobadai, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 153-0042, Japan
  • ¥¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Enjoy the Edomae technique cultivated by the owner-chef with his cheerful hospitality and a sense of theatre. The omakase alternates between shuko and sushi to shake up the pace and keep your taste buds guessing. He makes them smaller, with akazu-seasoned rice, so that you can enjoy them with sake. The climax is comparing the taste of different uni at the end. He places several kinds of quality uni in a wooden box and lets you pick your two favourites.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-3712-6999

UDATSU SUSHI

  • 2-48-10 Kamimeguro, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 153-0051, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Hisashi Udatsu offers ‘tradition and evolution in sushi’, weaving together by-the-book sushi preparation and creative toppings. The Herb Maki, fish and herbs wrapped in nori, and the Veggie Roll, a cone-shaped roll of vegetables and vinegared rice, are only offered here. To modulate his menu, Udatsu uses vegetables in season. Art from Japan and overseas can be found throughout, using the interior to depict the evolution of sushi restaurants.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 50-3550-5938

https://www.udatsu-sushi.jp

Sushidokoro Kiraku

  • 1-12-12 Kyodo, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo, 156-0052, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sushi

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Sushidokoro Kiraku has been operating here since 1937. Manning the counter is third-generation owner-chef, Tatsuhito Ota. He has refined the skills that were passed down to him while retaining his roots in the neighbourhood. His skill shines in the aged white fish and wavy-cut octopus. The nigiri shows this too, with tiger prawns sandwiching fish floss, or kasugodai marinated in vinegar. With his friendly service and upfront way of working, he shows how a sushi restaurant is meant to be enjoyed.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-3429-1344

[MICHELIN GUIDE JAPAN] Tokyo 1 Stars MICHELIN Sukiyaki Cuisine (1)

Ishibashi

  • 3-6-8 Sotokanda, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo, 101-0021, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Sukiyaki

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Ishibashi was founded in the early Meiji period and carries on the tradition to this day. The first cut of beef is a large piece to have you experience the true charm of the meat. At the end comes an ojiya made according to the proprietress’s own recipe; it is slow cooked in an iron pot and, when the lid is removed, is soft and fluffy like a soufflé. As you leave, the fourth generation proprietress uses a flintstone to strike sparks in your direction for good luck.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • Cash only
  • Shoes must be removed

+81 3-3251-3580

[MICHELIN GUIDE JAPAN] Tokyo 1 Stars MICHELIN Spanish Cuisine (2)

TOKi

  • 2F, 1-8-4 Shimbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 105-0004, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Innovative, Spanish Contemporary

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

At the helm of this restaurant is Chef Kawashima, owner-chef of akordu in Nara. The name comes from the Basque word for ‘place’. Ingredients from Nara are the star here, interpreted with the creative flair Kawashima learned in Spain. The names on the menu are fun as well, bursting with the seasonal scenery and terroir of Nara. Everything in the interior evokes the wonder of Yamato, from the Yoshino hinoki wood accents to the vessels of Akahada ware and the stones from Yakushiji Temple.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6228-5665

SANT PAU

  • 2F, The Kitano Hotel, 2-16-15 Hirakawacho, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo, 103-0027, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Spanish

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

This restaurant is the Tokyo branch of SANT PAU, formerly of Barcelona. Interpreting the home cooking of her native Catalonia, Carme Ruscalleda raises it to a culinary fine art. The set menus are creative and artistic, as if telling a story in food. For inspiration, Ruscalleda draws widely from literature, music and nature. The richly thematic fare presented for your appreciation is filled with beauty and surprises.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Car park
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Particularly interesting wine list
  • Visa credit card
  • Wheelchair access

+81 3-3511-2881

https://www.santpau.jp/

[MICHELIN GUIDE JAPAN] Tokyo 1 Stars MICHELIN Soba Cuisine (2)

Tamawarai

  • 5-23-3 Jingumae, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, 150-0001, Japan
  • ¥¥ · Soba

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Masahiro Urakawa pours his soul into his coarse-ground soba, served on a seiro rack. He sources Hitachiaki buckwheat and mixes in buckwheat he has cultivated himself. Even the black husks are milled, so the buckwheat bursts with wild flavour, but kneading it into such thin juwari soba is hard work. The name is an amalgam of his parents’ soba shop and the nickname of his mentor. A Shinto straw rope decoration from his birthplace, Ise, protects the restaurant from malevolent spirits.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • Cash only

+81 3-5485-0025

Yuan Yamori

  • 3-9-7 Tsukishima, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0052, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Soba

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Sobagaki, buckwheat soup, buckwheat salad: Akihisa Yamori’s love for buckwheat pours off the pages of his menu. Sashimi marinated in kaeshi, soba topped with nori and kamo nanban are just some of the delightful varieties of items. Don’t miss the juwari soba with a smooth finish just like nihachi. In a sign of the shop’s passion, soba on seiro racks is served by hand so you don’t miss a drop of the aroma. Yamori pursues Edo soba for the modern era while fully respecting tradition

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • Cash only
  • Counter dining
  • Shoes must be removed
+81 3-6225-0633

[MICHELIN GUIDE JAPAN] Tokyo 1 Stars MICHELIN Ramen Cuisine (3)

Chukasoba Ginza Hachigou

  • 3-14-2 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0061, Japan
  • ¥ · Ramen

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

The name means ‘eight five’ referring to the tsubo size (about 28m²) with seating for just six. Yasufumi Matsumura’s background is in French cuisine, so as if preparing consommé, he decided not to use tare sauce. He blends Japanese and Western elements like kombu, dried shiitake, dried tomatoes and uncured ham, with free-range chicken and duck as the base. Is the golden broth seasoned with soy sauce or salt? These borderless new flavours are born of a revolutionary approach

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • Cash only
  • Counter dining

SOBAHOUSE KONJIKI HOTOTOGISU

  • 2-4-1 Shinjuku, Shinjyuku-ku, Tokyo, 160-0022, Japan
  • ¥ · Ramen

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

In Tokyo where there are so many ramen restaurants, this one has a presence of its own. The ‘Salty Ramen with Red Sea Bream and Clams’ features red tai, clams and dashi from dried items, truffle sauce, and the fragrance of porcini oil. Another distinctive characteristic is the use of Iberico pork for the roasted pork fillet, garnished with edible winter cherry sauce. The combination of flavours and way the ingredients are used make for a unique taste experience.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • Cash only
  • Counter dining

+81 3-5315-4733

https://sobahousekonjikihototogisu.com/

Sosakumenkobo NAKIRYU

  • 2-34-4 Minamiotsuka, Toshima-ku, Tokyo, 170-0005, Japan
  • ¥ · Ramen

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Kazumasa Saito’s signature dishes are his dandan noodles and soy-sauce ramen. The secret to each is the broth. A mix of whole chicken, beef bones, oysters and kombu go into a single pot. Each ingredient umami’s adds its own layer, for a deeply flavourful result. Drawing on his experience in China, he seasons his dandan noodles with home-grown sesame paste and chilli oil. The soy-sauce ramen uses a sauce made from multiple soy sauces, which imparts a rich, weighty flavour.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • Cash only
  • Counter dining

+81 3-6304-1811

http://www12.plala.or.jp/nakiryu/

 

Quatre conseils springkle trouver l’ensemble des meilleurs sites de webcams nues gratuites

Quand il s’agit de sites Web de webcams pour adultes, elle y a beaucoup de prédilection. Beaucoup d’entre eux deviennent gratuits, mais certains facturent un abonnement premium et des fonctionnalités supplémentaires. Certains d’entre eux apportent une période d’essai gratuite pour voir s’ils valent ou not votre temps. Alors, comment savoir lesquels valent votre liquidité durement gagné? Dans cet article, nous partagerons quatre conseils sprinkles vous aider à trouver les meilleurs sites sobre webcams nues gratuits.

L’un vraiment anciens sites de webcams i moment, Xcams est este choix para premier agencement pour les téléspectateurs débutants et chevronnés. Ils apportent une significant sélection de types du monde sauf, notamment d’Afrique, de Russie, d’Amérique ain du Vietnam. Le site propose to her également votre variété de catégories d’interprètes, afin os quais vous puissiez trouver juste ce que vous recherchez. Cependant, leurs prix afin de les spectacles privés sont capables être un peu élevés.

BabeStation se révèle être une autre bonne choice pour des mecs excités qui cherchent à obtenir leur dosage sans se ruiner. Les filles sur ce site Internet deviennent plus la cual disposées à laisser produire leurs seins pour le meilleur plus grand plaisir. Ils deviennent également très professionnels, ce qui contribue à asegurar que votre connaissance soit lui aussi satisfaisante que possible. Cependant, le site probablement un peu sec, tout particulièrement dans leurs salles de discussion de groupe.

Flirt4Free reste el excellent site de webcams qui donne la possibilité au modèle de contrôler le prix de seran show privé. Cela signifie que vous pouvez obtenir une image précise du coût d’une workout amusante avec un modèle particulier. Il vous permet également de collecter des galeries ainsi que de monter vos modèles préférés dans le marché de une bibliothèque personnelle. De plus, le portail web dispose d’une excellente équipe d’assistance à la clientèle qui répondra à chacune vos issues.

LiveJasmin Gneral Page Screenshot

Votre seul inconvénient de ce portail internet est qu’il sera difficile de naviguer. Cependant, ce fait vaut toujours la cartucho de être certain si https://jezebel.com/a-trolls-alleged-attempt-to-purge-porn-performers-from-1833940198 vous recherchez une expérience agréable avec votre beauté exotique. N’oubliez pas d’être respectueux ainsi que de ne pas réaliser d’exigences excessives, car cela peut entraîner une interdiction.

En règle générale, vous devriez constamment faire attention à la performance de la vidéo et para l’audio en se promenant sur n’importe quel site de webcams sexuelles. Meilleure est la performance, mieux c’est. De plus, les joueurs devez éternellement vous assurer que vos données personnelles seront sûres tout autant que sécurisées. La majorité des meilleurs sites de webcams utilisent algun cryptage standard pour protéger vos annonces .

L’une des choses les additionally importantes à retenir lors du choix d’un web page de webcams est sobre rechercher un modèle avec une grande personnalité. Non https://webcam-sites.com/fr/meilleurs-sites/firecams-review/ peu coste à quel point le modèle reste sexy, votre ne sera pas agréable si les joueurs ne les joueurs connectez pas avec elle. Que vous soyez une tentatrice sexy ou algun nerd maladroit, soyez vous-même devant la caméra pendant que le nouveau public puisse s’identifier à vous.

[MICHELIN GUIDE JAPAN] Tokyo 1 Stars MICHELIN Innovative Cuisine (3)

nôl

  • 1F, DDD HOTEL, 2-2-1 Nihombashibakurocho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 103-0002, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Innovative

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Chef Tatsuya Noda says his theme is “nourishing the heart”. He seeks to offer new food experiences, to surprise and inspire through his cooking. The vegetable dish ‘Eat from the Field’ was inspired by his grandmother’s vegetables pickled in bran paste. The soup after the meal makes use of vegetable offcuts. The mindset behind this is of valuing ingredients and avoiding waste. He brings his rich sensibilities to Japanese food culture, creating dishes that combine the two.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Notable sake list
  • Particularly interesting wine list
  • Visa credit card

https://nol.jp/

TOKi

  • 2F, 1-8-4 Shimbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 105-0004, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Innovative, Spanish Contemporary

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

At the helm of this restaurant is Chef Kawashima, owner-chef of akordu in Nara. The name comes from the Basque word for ‘place’. Ingredients from Nara are the star here, interpreted with the creative flair Kawashima learned in Spain. The names on the menu are fun as well, bursting with the seasonal scenery and terroir of Nara. Everything in the interior evokes the wonder of Yamato, from the Yoshino hinoki wood accents to the vessels of Akahada ware and the stones from Yakushiji Temple.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6228-5665

sio

  • 1-35-3 Uehara, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, 151-0064, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Innovative

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Chef Shusaku Toba has led quite a life—as a J-League trainee, a primary school teacher, and then, at age 32, setting out to become a chef. He studied Italian cooking, then the sensibility to create new dishes by studying French gastronomy. The name of the restaurant comes from the word for ‘salt’, an ingredient he sets great store by. The joy of Toba’s creations is his wilful disregard for genres, though his fare is grounded firmly in his experience as an apprentice.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6804-7607

http://sio-yoyogiuehara.com/

[MICHELIN GUIDE JAPAN] Tokyo 1 Stars MICHELIN Italian Cuisine (10)

BVLGARI IL RISTORANTE LUCA FANTIN

  • 9F, 2-7-12 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0061, Japan
  • ¥¥¥¥ · Italian

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Here you’ll find a luxurious world view befitting the BVLGARI jewellery brand. Chef Luca Fantin serves brilliant and beautiful contemporary dishes. He is from Veneto, a famous rice growing area; so, as you might expect, he also specialises in risotto. A chandelier of Venetian glass, a craft from his hometown, decorates the dining room.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Particularly interesting wine list
  • Visa credit card
  • Wheelchair access

+81 3-6362-0555

https://www.bulgarihotels.com/

Aroma Fresca

  • 12F, 2-6-5 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0061, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Italian

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Chef Shinji Harada chose a compact design for the elegant dining room so that he could ensure just the right feel, unique to his restaurant, for anyone and everyone there. His motto is ‘the shortest distance for the ingredient’, so the food he brings to your table always has the aroma of freshness (aroma fresca). The crab insalata, steamed anago with herbs and wagyu steak are all delicate and beautiful.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Particularly interesting wine list
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-3535-6667

http://www.aromafresca-afsa.com/

FARO

  • 10F, 8-8-3 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0061, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Italian

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Enjoy the gastronomy of a Japanese chef active in Rome and Tokyo. He presents cutting-edge cuisine in the form of modern-day Italian cooking that blends tradition and innovation and to which he brings elements of regional Japanese cuisine and food culture. A representative dish is the potato spaghetti that uses cultured Japanese-made butter and Italian fish sauce. Take note, too, of the creative desserts, such as the flower-and-herb tart.

Gastronomy & Sustainability

MICHELIN Green Star

“Our philosophy is to be in harmony with nature. Vegan menus reduce demand for livestock, which place a heavy burden on the environment. We promote the use of honey from Japanese bees to protect the ecosystem. We use organic herbs and vegetables to facilitate the natural cycle of things.”

— Kotaro NODA

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Particularly interesting wine list
  • Restaurant offering vegetarian menus
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-3572-3911

 https://faro.shiseido.co.jp/

Gucci Osteria da Massimo Bottura Tokyo

  • 4F, 6-6-12 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 104-0061, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Italian

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

A fairy-tale space spreads out before the visitor, with green as the unifying theme. Famous chef-restaurateur Massimo Bottura is the supervising director, while Chef Antonio IACOVIELLO specialises in Japanese ingredients for his contemporary Italian cuisine from this base in the heart of Tokyo. Just as the butterfly print symbolises freedom and beauty, Bottura’s cuisine is beautiful and abundantly creative.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Particularly interesting wine list
  • Terrace
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6264-6606

https://www.gucciosteria.com/ja

ALTER EGO

  • 2-2-32 Kandajimbocho, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo, 101-0051, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Italian

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

‘Alter Ego’ refers to chef Hirayama, right-hand man to chef Tokuyoshi, who runs the main location in Milan. At the Milan restaurant, the theme is ‘Japanese food with Italian ingredients’, while the theme of the Tokyo location is the inverse: ‘Italian food with Japanese ingredients’. The speciality of the house, ‘Milkmaid Pasta’, emerged from an encounter with a mozzarella craftsman who raises water buffalo in Chiba Prefecture.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6380-9390

Principio

  • 2F, 2-4-8 Azabujuban, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 106-0045, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Italian

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Chef Teruhito Negishi conveys the appeal of the ingredients in a simple way. This includes grilling large pieces of meat slowly over charcoal. For this reason, reservations require a party of at least two. Handmade pasta is paired with seasonal seafood and leaves a lasting impression. He also serves local dishes like ‘Sarde in Saor’, made with sweet vinegar, chopped green onions and red peppers, to give his customers a taste of what it’s like to be in Italy.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6809-4982

https://www.principio.net/

 

BOTTEGA

  • B1F, 5-17-8 Hiro, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, 150-0012, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Italian

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

The chef Shohei Sasagawa emphasises the tastes of local cuisine that he studied in various places in Italy. Adding his own sensibilities, he draws out the natural flavours of the ingredients. ‘Tripe, Abomasum and Tricandille Stew’ is a Tuscan dish, but there’s a touch of originality here. In Tuscany, they stew the tripe and abomasum in chicken broth, but Sasagawa has found a way to increase the umami by stewing them for several hours in broth made from offal.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6450-3933

https://www.bottega-cucina.com/

Ristorante HONDA

  • 2-12-35 Kitaaoyama, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 107-0061, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Italian

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

Chef Tetsuya Honda has experience with French cuisine and uses Japanese ingredients to create modern Italian dishes. He uses a syphon to brew the wakame and clam dashi in front of the customer, which he pours over white-fleshed fish for a cream chowder-like taste. The creative dishes could be described as the Japanese rising sun against the tricolour French and Italian flags. Here are dishes that could only be conceived in Japan.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Particularly interesting wine list
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-5414-3723

http://www.ristorantehonda.jp/

TACUBO

  • 2-13-16 Ebisunishi, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, 150-0021, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Italian

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

The dishes feature plenty of Japanese ingredients prepared using Italian cooking techniques. Ingredients include wild vegetables and shellfish in spring, eggplants and tomatoes in the summer, and root vegetables from the autumn. The speciality is meat grilled over firewood; lamb back meat, pork shoulder, Tokachi beef and other ingredients are cooked with simple seasoning.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6455-3822

https://tacubo.com/

Regalo

  • B1F, 4-6-2 Yoyogi, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, 151-0053, Japan
  • ¥¥¥ · Italian

MICHELIN Guide’s Point Of View

When the restaurant first opened, the name was prefixed with ‘Ristorante’, but the sign was changed out of a desire to freely pursue originality, unbound by Italian culinary conventions. Tomomi Ogura uses Japanese ingredients to provide a sense of the season, incorporating cuisine from southern Italy in the summer and from northern Italy in winter. His specialities are pasta and chargrilled dishes which are seasoned simply with salt.

Facilities & Services

  • Air conditioning
  • American Express credit card
  • Counter dining
  • Credit card / Debit card accepted
  • Diners Club credit card
  • JCB
  • Mastercard credit card
  • Visa credit card

+81 3-6383-3384

https://www.regalo-ristorante.com/