Restaurants(3862)
Chunagon Kobe Sannomiya Main Branch
Founded in 1974 by Tsutsumi Sei-ichi, families spanning generations gather at Chunagon for a luxurious meal where lobster reigns supreme — and prepared a thousand and one ways.
Sukiyaki Sasaki
The beautifully marbled beef for Suiyaki Sasaki’s hotpot dishes stems from the restaurant’s unique heritage as a former commercial meat wholesaler in Nihombashi in 1919.
Yakiniku Lee-en Nakano
More than three decades of operations in the popular Nakano area have made this yakiniku restaurant a mainstay of residents and visitors alike. Traditional Korean dishes like soft tofu soup and cold noodles accompany top-quality wagyu.
Suigun No Sato
"Freshness" takes on a whole new meaning at this traditional restaurant in Hiroshima's sake district — fish is sourced daily from the market and kept live until served.
WARAYAKI funsista
Tradition meets change at this Gotanda restaurant, where seasonal fish, meats and vegetables are grilled over straw in traditional Kochi style. Ingredients are seared with intense but carefully controlled heat to bring out a delightful, smoky aroma.
Honten Yamashina
Perched on the top floor of Ginza Place, Honten Yamashina's unparalleled teppanyaki features 40-month-old Omi beef from Ozaki Farm in Shiga Prefecture.
Ginza Yamashina Hanare
Tucked like a hidden club behind Ginza Yamashira, this upscale yakiniku restaurant purchases a whole 40-month-old Omi cattle from Shiga Prefecture for its decadent beef cuts.
ILBrio Azabu
The highlight of this Azabu-Juban restaurant is the melt-in-your-mouth Hida beef, cut into thick, satisfying slices. Premium seasonal ingredients from all over Japan are crafted into immaculate course menus.
Etouke
Emblem of exquisite seafood by way of Fukuoka — Etouke is a posh but well-grounded sanctuary to experience the freshest sashimi in town.
Mt. Takao Beer Mount
Experience all-you-can-eat barbecue and unlimited beer on tap at Mt. Takao Beer Mount, Tokyo's highest beer garden.
Mahoroba Irori Shinsaibashi
One of Shinsaibashi’s fine dining benchmarks pits every table with a traditional irori — a Japanese sunken hearth — to grill its stellar lineup of Awaji beef and seasonal seafood over flames fueled by Kishu Binchotan charcoal.
mahoroba Teppan Shinsaibashi
The hidden teppanyaki fine diner in Osaka doesn't just settle with live grill theatrics — spare-no-expense standard extends to its selection of premium wagyu beef, spiny lobster and abalone cooked over charcoal and iron plate.
mahoroba Teppan Okinawa
Head to one of Okinawa’s spirited nightlife areas for a meal at Mahoroba Teppan Okinawa, a sophisticated teppanyaki restaurant offering the best of Ishigaki meat and wagyu.
Nangoku Fruits Parlor
The fashionable fruit parlor in Fukuoka, an extension of a renowned fruit and vegetable company founded in 1932, has "fruit connoisseurs" who handpick the finest varieties and serve them at their peak perfection.
Teppanyaki Matsuo
Meal at this teppanyaki restaurant is saddled with considerable expectations, which only seem to build as the door swings open and diners encounter Okinawan meats cooked on iron plates or flame-seared over straws and charcoals.
A LONG VACATION.
An all-day eatery with an open kitchen that transforms into a swish bar in the evening, A LONG VACATION. tosses quality pasta with a nouveau Okinawan twist. Try the oyster platters or do no wrong with the lobster rolls.
Chinchikurin Miyajimaguchi Store
Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki served piping hot, with bragging views of the Seto Inland Sea and Miyajima Island in this award-winning waterfront restaurant.
Chinchikurin Nagarekawa Store
Come for the award-winning, Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki of the good old days in a 50-year-old building, and linger longer for the crowd-pulling, fun vibe.
TOHAKU CHAKAN
Within the Tokyo National Museum, this 270-year-old heritage building has been transformed into a creative fusion teahouse, where one of Tokyo’s most influential chefs proves that originality still has a place among traditionalists.
Onzoushi Kiyoyasutei Roppongi
Roppongi’s rite of passage to everything regal and Japanese is found in this subterranean space, where a stunning courtyard anchors the space and decadent hairy crab and beef gets the aristocratic treatment it deserves.
La Cuisine Enju
Teppanyaki by way of French — from the award-winning, France-trained chef comes a fine restaurant in Hikone that blends Gallic techniques with local flavors, serving piping-hot, ultra-luxe grills that just won’t quit.
Tokyo sakaki.
“From Tokyo to the world" — after 25 years in the making, this neo-Japanese haven in Yoyogi bursts onto the scene, led by a visionary chef whose boundless ambition fuels every dish.
Ginza Hakobune Daiginjyo SHIZUKU
The reputation of this Ginza venue primarily rests on its impressive 500-plus sake library, enhanced by the allure of a private dining experience and teamed with Hokuriku-Shinetsu-inspired seasonal kaiseki that stands on its own merits.
Nihonbashi Funazushi
At this Nihonbashi restaurant, a third-generation owner plays with classic sushi flavors and brings a touch of old Edo to modern Tokyo.
RIVA
With promising hospitality, love for Hiroshima and a store name that immortalizes the French actress Emmanuelle Riva, RIVA works on a seasonally-inflicted, 18-course kaiseki that changes monthly.
Inasa
It’s out with the ordinary, and in with the new for 50-year-old Inasa, which transforms Hiroshima’s Japanese anchovy into gourmet hamburger steaks instead of the usual treatment of sashimi.
Sushi Aoi
As the culmination of his work as a chef, Sushi Aoi’s Hoshi intends to be as serious about his sushi as it would undoubtedly be about his fresh produce.
Wagyu Yakiniku Kakunoshin Roppongi
An encyclopedic journey into dry-aged wagyu and Kobe beef, guided by an Iwate native so devoted to meat that he’s known as the “Niku Ojisan” — the Meat Uncle.