Restaurants(10185)
Hiroshima Yakiniku Nikuya Nobusuke Kamiyamachi
Hiroshima Yakiniku Nikuya Nobusuke Kamiyamachi, located near Kamiyacho Higashi Station, offers premium Yakiniku and Horumon dishes. Highlighting its exquisite Wagyu selections, it's a must-visit for Japanese cuisine enthusiasts.
Fry-ya
Customizeable mixed-fry set meals, a variety of cooking oils and bread crumbs and Michelin Bib-gourmand quality keeps this fried food specialist store in Takadanobaba exciting.
Sumibi Yakiniku Buchan
Sumibi Yakiniku Buchan in Kanazawa offers traditional yakiniku and horumon dishes, set in a serene location perfect for gatherings. Feast on beef tongue and shiro, cooked over charcoal.
Eiki
Son of a yakitori restaurant owner and former apprentice to Japan's best yakitori restaurant Torishiki, Onoda Kohei of Eiki is one of the young talents ushering in a new era for yakitori.
Sumibi Yakiniku Fujita
Sumibi Yakiniku Fujita offers Yakiniku and Horumon in Sano, near Aeon Mall, featuring premium wagyu and a unique charcoal grilling method. Perfect for meat lovers.
Hifumi
Savor the essence of Japanese seafood in Minamiuonuma's Hifumi, near Echigo-Yuzawa. Discover exquisite dishes and traditional finesse.
Sushi Ryuta
Sushi Ryuta in Roppongi offers award-winning sushi by Chef Ryuta with an omakase focus. Convenient location near Roppongi Station.
Fugu Kaiseki Garden
A young restaurant with an old soul — finding its home in an 80-year-old building constructed in the Showa era, Fugu Kaiseki Garden be the most sophisticated way dive into the daring world of the perilous Shimonoseki blowfish.
Bistro Yanagihara
Near Kyoto’s Kamo River, savor French dishes infused with rustic flavors of the Alsace recipe — a harmonious marriage of French and German.
Chinese Noodles Roku
Chinese-inspired ramen built on a foundation of duck, venison bones, and dried longan — something you'd expect from the Michelin-starred chef of Velrosier.
Menya Inoichi
Ramen at this Michelin-featured shop centers around the root of Kyoto's culinary soul: dashi.
Teuchisoba Kanei
Along the stretch near Kenkun Shrine in Kyoto, find the self-taught owner milling his own buckwheat to make two types of soba: juwari and arabiki.
Lapintaika
Like the restaurant's name, which means "coming back", the trattoria has newcomers-turned-regulars returning for more.
Kobushi Ramen
Local Kyoto flavors in a bowl of ramen — the owner-chef creates one-of-a-kind broth made with Kyoto duck, blackthroat seaperch and dried sardines.
Ramen Kuon
Ramen-making process taken to the next level with a triple broth of chicken, shellfish and fish, and noodles made from three types of flour.
Miyazaki no Daidokoro Akaneya
Calling itself “Miyazaki’s kitchen,” this izakaya is a proud showcase of the tropical prefecture’s delicacies. Every table is private room seating, and generous all-you-can-drink plans make it the perfect place to celebrate down south.
Hachidori
Impressive lineup of sake from small breweries, paired with dishes featuring Shonai-grown vegetables, makes this couple-run izakaya a darling locale in Osaka.
Ikkon Uehara
A tiny but mighty kappo restaurant in Kyoto that serves true-to-tradition fares in tune with Japan’s micro-seasons.
Sobakiri Imose
The generous lineup of rustic soba at this charming joint transports you to an idyllic Japanese countryside akin to the owner's hometown in Wakayama.
Hakata Yakiniku Nurubon
Just minutes from JR Hakata Station, this Fukuoka yakiniku restaurant brings 40-plus years of connections and expertise in meat distribution to its yakiniku business. Authentic Korean fare supplements exquisitely marbled wagyu beef.
Mendokoro Janomeya
A gourmet stop of a lifetime — savor heavenly chicken-centric ramen in Kyoto with a seal of approval from the Michelin Guide.
Kanesho
A small establishment with a big legacy: Kanesho is the inventor of kinshidon, an unagi rice bowl dish topped with ribbons of egg omelet.
Akihana
Michelin-approved Akihana specializes in the type of unpretentious Sichuan cooking food that you’d find in the province itself.
Korisu
The mother helms the kitchen, while her daughters are on the floor carrying big-portioned, home-cooked Western fares in this charming yoshoku eatery.
Jukuseibuta Kawamura
The best introduction to tonkatsu in town — juicy breaded pork cutlets, double-fried with lard and oil, and served with house-special condiments.
Tonkatsu Daiki
Tonkatsu Daiki might not reinvent the wheel with its textbook-perfect tonkatsu, but what it does, it does exceptionally well.
Tonkatsu Katsu Hana
This family-run restaurant in Osaka focuses on one dish done exceptionally well: pork cutlets, made from up to 14 different breeds of Japan-grown pork.
Nihonshuzammai Utsutsuyo
Beer might be the first order of business for a customary toast, but at one of the best bars in Osaka, sake is the name of the game — and what you should order next.