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Contribuiți la feedbackGreat service and food. Came here for lunch after after reading about them on Boston Globe. The chef was so kind to customer make the poke lunch because of my gluten intolerance. Got to thank him personally. Fish felt as fresh as what we get in California. Highly recommend ordering some nigiri. They made sure to specify that the sauces were gluten free. The desserts were also delicious. Family really liked the green tea tiramisu (which I couldn’t have) and the tofu pudding with a burnt caramel.
The best sushi, done in a way like no other. This will be my go to. The amazing staff owner chef talked through, at length, the process involved to create such wonderful food. Couldn’t recommend this place more highly!
Food This is a tapas style Japanese restaurant and most of the dishes we ordered were wonderful. Our favourite one is the poke tower. It was beautiful and the taste was additive. I almost wanted to order one more. The next favourite is the calamari tempura. The dipping cream was unique and flavourful, but not too heavy. We also ordered mushrooms, oyster, pork belly and ikura rice ball, which were all very good. The only dish we didn’t like was the chicken Katsu bao because it was very bland. Besides all of the dishes, we ordered three sets of nigiri, toro, king salmon and uni. They did the rice very well, but the fish quality is not up to the mark since they are charging $9 per piece. The uni had a slight fishy and metal taste. For dessert, we had the matcha tiramisu. The texture was as soft as butter. Everything else It is a small but classy restaurant. The background music was soothing and the waitress was very friendly. I liked that they give a brief description of the dish when serving. Since it is a small restaurant, the space was tight and the table legs were not comfortable. I had to stretch my legs after the dinner.
Pretty good Kaiseki, sushi not as good (4/5 by UAS standards Went there on Saturday after I went to O Ya yesterday. I also went to Gion Nishikawa 祇園 にしかわ/Sushi Gion Tadayasu in Kyoto, and Kioicho Mitani/Sushi Nakamura 鮨 なかむらin Tokyo this summer. So I am on the harder side to impress. (I was going to give 4.5 but there is only 4 or 5 on yelp? It was closer to 5 than 4. Their decor is very nice and new, 3 floors in total, and I sat at the first for Kaiseki/Omakase, I was the only one there at 1F from 530-730pm. The lack of guest for Omakase is probably one of the reasons their sushi quality suffers. It just wasn't as fresh as other top tier sushi restaurants. Though the sizes are big (especially compared to O Ya where is basically half their size and it is still very fresh compared to your normal sushi shop. The Kaiseki part of my Omakase was nearly perfect, beautiful plating and strong favors. I think they made the favor stronger to suit the American palate. Being Chinese I am a fan of that, but some Japanese purist might not like it as much. I paid a 20 or 25 USD upgrade for the Wagyu steak, definitely was the best part of the dinner, even better than what I tasted in Gion Mouriya in Kyoto. The sushi part is a bit weak when compared to the wonderful Kaiseki part... It was good but not great especially when compared to what I had in Japan. I would say the rice needed a bit more vinegar. I talked this with the chef, he told me that vinegar evaporates during preparation of sushi. Again as with the freshness of the fish, I think the lack of guests definitely played a part here. More guests more sushi being made fresher fish more frequent rice preparation. The favors of the sushi also seemed to be on the stronger side (more sauce was added I think. Again I liked it as I stated above. And their knife skill could also use a bit more work, as some cuts on the sushi were too long or not clean. But I informed them I have a bit appetite before I went in, so it might have something to do with that. (They did made portions of the course bigger and I appreciate that very much, O Ya in comparison didn't email or call beforehand to discuss anything (In Japan if you aren't full after omakase you can always ask the chef for a bit more and it is usually free For the deserts/drink. The desert was good but the matcha drink that came with it is weak... I think either too much water was added or the matcha powder wasn't that good. For sake the selection was good but nothing premium or expensive. I went for the sake flight which was good value for the price, and the sake offered was pretty good especially for the price. Though I didn't get to see or take any pictures of the sake bottle, which was offered to me in Japan as well as O Ya. Maybe there is something they can work on here. (If I can take a picture of the sake bottle then it is much easier for me to remember which sake I liked and order them later. Sake flight was 38 for 3 cups, the sake pairing I had in O Ya for grand omakase was 150 for around 6 cups (there was probably 1-2 cups more but I had to stop before I was way too drunk. So the value isn't bad, but I think they should look into getting some more expensive sakes here. O Ya offered me Dassai 23 and 39 for the pairing and had Dassai beyond for sale (though at 3-4x markup. The place is new so they might not have as much clot as O Ya in getting ultra premium sake, but even myself managed to get 2 bottles of Dassai beyond for 400 a bottle in USA. (300 in Japan The chef was very friendly and talked to me after the meal. Considering the price (around 300 for everything I ordered when compared to O Ya (500+ with pairing and tips I am probably coming back. Overall I would 100% recommend this place, just maybe try the Kaiseki omakase before you do the sushi one.
Food This is a tapas style Japanese restaurant and most of the dishes we ordered were wonderful. Our favorite is the Poke Tower. It was beautiful and the taste was additive. I wanted to order another one. The next favorite is the kalamari tempura. The diving cream was unique and tasteful, but not too heavy. We also ordered mushrooms, oysters, pig bells and ikura rice ball that were all very good. The only dish we didn't like was the chicken Katsu bao because it was very bland. In addition to all courts, we ordered three sets of Nigiri, Toro, King Lachs and Uni. They did the rice very well, but the fish quality is not up to the brand as they charge $9 per piece. The university had a light fish and metal taste. To dessert we had the Matcha tiramisu. The texture was as soft as butter. Everything else It is a small but stylish restaurant. The background music was soothing and the waitress was very friendly. I liked to give a brief description of the dish while serving. Since it is a small restaurant, the room was narrow and the table legs were not comfortable. I had to stretch my legs after dinner.