★★★ MichelinTabelog 银¥¥¥¥Japanese
Hideki Ishikawa’s guiding principle is ‘mui-shizen’: serve cuisine that is true to nature, free from artifice. Flavours are light, respecting each ingredient. Simplicity makes presentations all the more impressive, with consideration for harmony among flavours. Niigata rice is cooked fresh and served in earthen bowls, imparting the taste of the chef’s homeland. Kitchen and service staff work together with the practised solidarity of a well-rehearsed team.
★★★ MichelinTabelog 银黑珍珠二钻¥¥¥¥French, Contemporary
Shinobu Namae welcomes guests in the spirit of ‘ichiza-konryu’, the philosophy that a restaurant is built on connections among chefs, staff, guests and food producers. The gastronomy and culture of Japan are here expressed through prix fixe menus. After the aperitif, the steaming hot risotto arrives―its inspiration drawn from the freshly cooked rice in 'chakaiseki' and brimming with the seasonal bounty of both mountain and sea. ‘Artisanal Vegetables’, the signature dish, is an homage to farmers. Weak matcha tea, borrowed from the etiquette of the Sowa tea ceremony, signals the meal’s end.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.4/5 · 100 条
L'Effervescence位于东京港区,提供融合日式精神的当代法式料理,连续五年获三星米其林认证。多数食客赞赏其食材处理的精准度、精致的摆盘及独特的葡萄酒搭配,氛围静谧优雅。然而,部分评论指出服务节奏缓慢,用餐时间过长,且存在过度解释或态度不佳的情况。食物质量评价两极,虽有惊艳之作,也有被指平淡或苦涩的菜品。整体而言,这是一次高端体验,但性价比和服务稳定性存在争议。
适合追求极致精致法式体验且能包容潜在服务瑕疵的食客。
★★★ MichelinLa Liste 96.5分黑珍珠三钻¥¥¥¥Japanese
Seiji Yamamoto charts the vastness of Japanese cuisine. He handles his knives and tends his charcoal grill with relentlessly honed technique. He elucidates the properties of each ingredient and the best ways to prepare it with a scientific eye, displaying unwavering resolve. His winter menu is replete with fugu items, products of years of experience and passion for Japanese cuisine. Disarming frankness shines in Yamamoto’s favourite expression: ‘I’m a chef because I love cooking.’ From January to March, RyuGin offers only the exclusive fugu course.
★★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
Hidetoshi Nakamura’s cuisine embodies harmony, subtlety, and purity. With minimal seasoning, he captures each ingredient’s subtle trace in water— using only water and sea salt. Mountain and sea are intimately linked through water. Nakamura reminds us that we are a part of the magnificent connection between Nature and her laws. This elegant aesthetic, of beauty through simplicity, exudes modesty, returning us to a spirit of gratitude for the natural world.
★★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
A noren of Tokushima indigo, Tokushima sakes, fish from Naruto and Awa beef make Hiroyuki Kanda’s roots clear. Selecting ingredients carefully and applying minimal preparation is Kanda’s style of cooking. For example, rice should be cooked to perfection, each grain distinct, with small holes like crab burrows dotting the surface. The chef’s motto is ‘subtle flavour is true flavour’, and it is in the subtle flavours that depth of character is known.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.4/5 · 63 条
位于港区的高评分日料店,以精致料理和温馨氛围著称。多数食客赞赏食材新鲜、摆盘精美,厨师亲自服务且态度亲切。然而,部分评论指出餐厅位置隐蔽难寻,内部空间狭小简约,甚至被形容为局促。服务方面存在两极分化:有人体验极佳,也有人抱怨接待缺失或上菜节奏过快。整体而言,食物品质是核心亮点,但环境舒适度与性价比引发争议,适合追求地道风味且能接受紧凑空间的食客。
适合重视料理品质、能接受紧凑环境的资深日料爱好者。
★★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
Sometimes our connections intervene to change our lives. Harutaka Takahashi’s mischievous youth in Asahikawa took a turn for the better when, through a tempura master who was a close friend of his potter uncle, he landed a job at Sukiyabashi Jiro. Like Ravel’s Bolero, sushi here is presented with a particular rhythm, building toward a crescendo of sweetness, sourness and temperature in harmony. Destiny is in the taste and texture of every piece of sushi at Harutaka.
★★★ MichelinTabelog 银La Liste 98.5分¥¥¥¥French, French Contemporary
‘L’Osier’ means ‘The Willow’. The name comes from the willow trees that once symbolised Ginza and is a nod to the shop’s founding location. When the doors open, guests are greeted by a glass artwork depicting a willow tree. Half a century has passed since the restaurant opened, but it has never stopped innovating. Chef Olivier Chaignon cultivates relationships with producers around the country, creating French cuisine at the cutting edge of the era.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.4/5 · 100 条
L'OSIER位于银座,提供法式当代料理。多数评论称赞其精致的菜品呈现、友好的服务及舒适的氛围,厨师精通双语且对细节关注到位。部分食客认为食物质量高,但亦有负面反馈指出酱汁过稀、摆盘或调味未达预期,以及松露香气不足等问题。尽管有少数关于价值和服务的批评,整体评分较高,适合追求精致用餐体验的旅客。
适合在银座寻求精致法式用餐体验且能接受细微口味差异的旅客。
★★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
The Japanese love of small spaces is deeply connected with the spirit of the tea ceremony and its cultural background. The counter, affording just the right distance between guests and Chef Toshiya Kadowaki, seats just six. The private room, whose low ceiling suggests a tearoom, is so intimate that guests can feel each other’s breathing. The menu features dishes where ingredients in season come together to create fleeting sensations that linger in the memory forever. Truffle rice, enriching the meal in both aroma and flavour, is a case in point.
★★★ Michelin全球50最佳 #39Tabelog 金La Liste 99分¥¥¥¥Chinese
Tomoya Kawada sees cooking as a reconciliation between nature and humanity. He names his approach Sazenka, which literally means ‘tea-Zen-Chinese’, out of a desire to create Chinese fare that mediates between the worlds of tea and Zen. His cuisine harmoniously combines the techniques he learned in China with the soul and spiritual features of Japan – ‘wakon-kansai’ is the theme. Japanese ingredients in season are used in spring-roll fillings and Sichuan stir-fries, lending a seasonal dimension to Chinese cuisine.
★★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French, Contemporary
The name comes from Shuzo Kishida’s passion for discovering the true essence of French cuisine. The chef pursues his quest through three processes: ingredients, flame and seasoning. For Kishida, ‘ingredients’ means deep respect for food producers, common to all aspects of cooking; ‘flame’ means flame-handling that is finely attuned to the fish or meat at hand; and ‘seasoning’ is flavouring that is tailored to each ingredient. The soul of cooking lies in this trinity. The white spaces on the menu leave space for your imagination.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.2/5 · 100 条
位于品川的Quintessence是米其林三星法餐厅,以精致融合菜和优质服务著称。多数评论赞赏其食材新鲜、创意十足及酒单搭配,氛围宁静高雅。然而,部分负面反馈指出存在上菜节奏过快、服务员催促用餐的情况,且预约难度极大。另有观点认为性价比一般,且对非正式着装顾客包容度较低。整体而言,这是一次需要严格守时且注重礼仪的高端餐饮体验。
适合追求极致法式料理体验、能接受严格用餐节奏并提前数月预约的食客。
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
Experimentation with new flavours blows winds of innovation into Japanese cuisine. The chef’s purview extends to Western ingredients such as truffle and caviar. Reverence for dashi, however, keeps his dishes within the bounds of Japanese cuisine. The chef treads a unique path, weaving creativity and Western flamboyance into Japanese fare. The counter seats are always fully booked but, with luck, a cancellation might make the private dining room available.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.7/5 · 51 条
Kohaku位于东京神乐坂,由曾在米其林三星石川店修行的店主小泉功二主理,主打融合创意的精致日式料理。多数评论盛赞其食物品质卓越,如鲍鱼肝、稚鮎及鹅肝等食材处理完美,风味独特且不断进化。服务亲切周到,氛围安静舒适,适合多种场合。然而,部分食客认为价格偏高,性价比一般,个别体验中感到菜品未达预期或上菜节奏有待优化。总体而言,这是一家基础扎实且具艺术感的知名餐厅。
适合追求精致日式创意料理与舒适用餐环境的食客。
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
The totality of this ryotei’s art—the cuisine, the ceremonial furnishings, the service—makes a deep impression. The original owner-chef learned the basics of cooking under the guidance of legendary epicure Kitaoji Rosanjin. The current chef, guardian of the traditions of the Fukuda family, displays his talents with creations that delight guests, squarely focused on respect for ingredients. He puts into practice Rosanjin’s famous dictum: ‘Eight or nine times out of ten, the quality of the ingredients selected determines the quality of a dish.’
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
The chef’s grandparents’ house once stood on this land. He harboured a lifelong dream of becoming a sushi artisan; the first knife he ever held was a gift from his grandfather. Never forgetting the spirit of the novice, the chef takes an honest, no-nonsense approach to his ingredients. “Letting the ingredients do the talking is not the same as doing nothing,” he says—and indeed, the chef devotes great time and effort to food preparation. As an apprentice, he learned from his mentor that cooking means thinking for yourself. The work of the old days inspires today’s creativity.
★★ Michelin全球50最佳 #8Tabelog 银La Liste 96.5分¥¥¥Japanese
The team at Den welcomes guests with bright smiles and easy conversation. A playful, inventive menu brings a fresh perspective to Japanese cuisine. The omakase menu begins with monaka, a wafer sandwich filled with foie gras seasoned with miso, along with fruits and vegetables. Fried chicken wing tips are stuffed with iimushi, mochi rice steamed with seasonal toppings. The delight of his guests is what drives the chef. Original thinking gives rise to the sort of fun dining experience only Den can offer.
★★ MichelinTabelog 银¥¥¥¥Innovative
This gustatory experience is a journey through Peru. The menu features the culinary traditions of the Andes and the ecosystem of the Amazon basin. Each menu item lists the producing region and, uniquely, its elevation. Taking these altitudes as a guide, the meal traces a route through sea, mountain and river, weaving a tale of diverse natural environments. Dried foods from Peru combine with Japanese ingredients to bring forth a cuisine that is richly imaginative.
★★ Michelin全球50最佳 #14Tabelog 银¥¥¥¥Innovative
Narisawa celebrates the culture of Japan’s ‘satoyama’, rural hillscapes, through the genre of ‘innovative satoyama cuisine’. The Japanese islands form a long arc from north to south, and most of the land is satoyama. In this geographical backdrop from foothills to plains, people have found ways to live harmoniously and sustainably with nature. This image of the satoyama informs the imagination of Narisawa’s cuisine. The restaurant uses traditional craftworks such as lacquerware and washi paper, harmonising diverse people and culture.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.6/5 · 100 条
NARISAWA位于东京港区,以创新日式料理闻名。多数评论盛赞其食材新鲜、呈现精美及独特的“生长面包”等仪式体验,氛围沉浸且具文化深度。服务通常被描述为专业且解释清晰,但少数反馈指出节奏拖沓或细节不足。部分食客认为菜品虽美味但缺乏新意,甚至感觉停滞不前。尽管整体评分高达4.6/5,仍有声音质疑其性价比及与米其林星级的匹配度,认为服务精致度有待提升。
适合追求极致日式创新体验和仪式感、对服务细节有较高期待的食客。
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
‘Hakuun’ is a Zen term meaning ‘white cloud’, denoting a spirit of flowing leisurely along without worldly attachment. The name proclaims the restaurant’s flexible approach to Japanese cuisine. Fragrance and temperature are prized. Bonito is shaved and dashi drawn before guests’ eyes. Wanmono is served at the perfect moment, when harmony between broth and main ingredient reaches its fullest expression. Beef and game, char-grilled and straw-roasted, display originality and skill. Norms are observed while evolution is encouraged.
★★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
To spread the joy of Kyoto cuisine beyond the ancient capital, Kikunoi opened a Tokyo branch. Guests are warmly greeted with cheerful calls of ‘Oide-yasu!’, a traditional welcome in the Kyoto dialect. While located in central Tokyo, the mood, taste and feel of the restaurant are pure Kyoto. Yearly events are woven into the menu, and eye-catching dishes served on brilliantly decorated plates. Western ingredients are included too, expressing contemporary flavours. An attractive feature is the choice of tatami mat or counter seating, combining the charms of ryotei and kappo.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.4/5 · 80 条
Akasaka Kikunoi位于东京港区,以京都风格怀石料理闻名。多数评论称赞其食材优质、摆盘精美及用餐节奏舒适,部分顾客对松茸饭等菜品印象深刻,且服务贴心,甚至提供剩菜打包。然而,约10%的负面评价指出食物口味清淡或令人失望,认为性价比不高,服务虽礼貌但缺乏惊喜,氛围略显沉闷。整体而言,这是一家传统且稳定的老牌餐厅,适合追求经典日式料理体验的游客,但对创新或强烈风味有期待的食客可能会感到平淡。
适合寻求传统京都怀石料理体验、重视食材品质的游客。
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Italian
Standing alone in his kitchen, Tomofumi Saito engages with Italian cuisine in earnest. His attention to detail is relentless, from the cuisine itself to the music, flowers and other elements. Seating is limited to ensure each dish gets his undivided attention. When he creates new menu items, there are no prototypes: he pushes himself hard to create inventive cuisine found nowhere else. 'Prisma' means 'prism' in Italian and the high standards Saito demands of himself shine in a rainbow of culinary inventiveness.
★★ Michelin¥¥¥French, Contemporary
The crown, ‘ryuzu’ in Japanese, is a vital part of a watch. Under the leadership of Ryuta Iizuka, the team moves like clockwork: chefs, patissiers, servers, and the sommelier working in perfect synchrony, like the gears of a precision timepiece. Foodstuffs from the chef’s native Niigata Prefecture, as well as vegetables from the Noto region of Ishikawa Prefecture, reflect the essence of each passing seasons. The passion of food producers is transformed into cuisine by the kitchen and conveyed to guests through graceful service.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.6/5 · 80 条
位于港区的Ryuzu是一家拥有两星米其林荣誉的法式当代餐厅,以精致氛围和优质食材著称。食物融合日式视角,使用和牛等本地原料,部分菜品如松露鹅肝和香菇获好评,但亦有评论认为创意不足或口味偏淡。服务整体优雅细致,但偶有上菜节奏或细节疏忽的反馈。尽管地处繁华地段却保持静谧,适合追求高品质用餐体验的食客,但部分顾客对性价比存疑。
适合寻求安静优雅法式体验且能接受精致清淡口味的食客。
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
The movements are those of one immersed in the world of nigiri. On the fingertips of the left hand balances a piece of fish; clutched in the right, a fistful of sushi rice; the tip of the forefinger applies wasabi. Pushing, occasionally pulling, and scoring in delicate strokes, the single-edged knife crafts hidden incisions to help flavour soak in and heat travel through. Gracefully flowing motion, fine-tuned through daily practice, is the simplicity that holds countless truths. The spirit of nigirizushi is in capable hands with Shintaro Suzuki.
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
These days more and more guests are asking where the fish are caught. ‘If we could eat sushi where it’s caught, we wouldn’t need markets!’ retorts chef Takashi Ono. Discernment is a faculty built only slowly through long years of experience and knowledge. Along the way Ono has cultivated bonds of trust with seafood brokers, enabling him to source quality. The markets are the classic tale of ‘giri’ and ‘ninjo’, human connections forged in duty and loyalty. Sushi in purest form, stripped to its essence.
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French, Contemporary
‘Simple and minimal’ is Noboru Arai’s guiding philosophy, grounded in precision. Using few ingredients and minimal seasoning, he pursues a refined, elegant expression of French cuisine. He communicates regularly with chefs of other countries, borrowing from a wide range of culinary cultures in search of originality. While French in spirit, the proprietress greets guests in kimono—an Asakusa touch that reflects the charm of Tokyo’s traditional downtown.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.0/5 · 61 条
HOMMAGE位于东京台东区,主打精致法式料理,融合现代创意与简约哲学。多数食客称赞其食材新鲜、烹饪精准且口味独特,厨师团队对过敏原等需求响应专业。服务普遍受到好评,员工态度友好且乐于用英语详细讲解菜品。环境安静雅致,但部分评论指出空间较小,偶有邻桌噪音干扰,且店内无电梯,对行动不便者不友好。整体而言,这是一家注重细节与用餐体验的高品质餐厅,适合追求安静氛围和精致法餐的旅客。
适合追求安静精致法餐体验且行动便利的旅客。
★★ Michelin全球50最佳 #2¥¥¥French
The long table bears a close resemblance to the dining tables of European nobility. Dinner is served table d’hôte: guests gather around a single large table, sharing the joy of good food and conversation. Reading the mood of the era, Chef Hiroyasu Kawate serves up delicious food and eco-consciousness, actively incorporating plant-based ingredients. The choice of vegetarian dishes as main meals is a new twist. Whether vegetarian or vegan, the fare blazes a fresh trail in vegetable cuisine.
★★ MichelinTabelog 银黑珍珠二钻¥¥¥¥French, Contemporary
Menu items are named after the traditional 24 divisions of the seasons, following the celestial longitude of the sun. Ingredients take on a poetic expression as well, and scenes of intersection between nature and human activity convey a wealth of feeling: people preparing food, or eating it. The feelings such images evoke will vary from person to person. Through the sensibilities of Lionel Beccat, we feel the bonds between humanity and nature.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.3/5 · 100 条
ESqUISSE位于银座,拥有米其林二星声誉。多数评论盛赞其当代法式料理的创意与精致,强调日本食材与法国技法的融合,服务专业且氛围优雅。然而,部分负面评价指出食物缺乏平衡感,分量过小,且存在陈旧气味或氛围沉闷的问题。尽管整体评分较高,但价值感存在争议,有食客认为价格偏高,体验未达预期。
适合追求精致创意法餐及优雅环境的食客,但对性价比敏感者需谨慎。
★★ MichelinLa Liste 96.5分黑珍珠三钻¥¥¥¥Japanese
Standing at a counter made from a 700-year-old cypress, Toru Okuda celebrates the vitality of nature through his cooking. The shop boasts water from Okuda’s native Shizuoka, fish from Suruga Bay and wasabi and tea from his home prefecture as well. His heartfelt respect and love for Japanese food led him to open a branch in Paris to spread the gospel of true Japanese cuisine. Opening a fish restaurant in a country without a culture of ikejime was a bold move. By proclaiming food in which Japan can take pride before the world, Okuda is leading one of the world’s great cuisines into an exciting f
★★ Michelin¥¥¥Tempura
Fumio Kondo breathes new life into classic Edo tempura by incorporating vegetables. He popularized the idea that tempura is, in essence, a form of steaming. Working backward from the frying time, he prepares ingredients just before frying to preserve freshness and vibrancy. As the coated tempura pieces steam in their own moisture, flavours of coating and tempura piece merge into one. Kondo’s quiet, unwavering focus as he tends to the pot speaks to the pride he takes in his craft.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.1/5 · 100 条
Tempura Kondo位于中央区,评价两极分化。正面反馈称赞其食材新鲜(如现捞虾)、面衣轻盈无油味,白芦笋和红薯等菜品备受推崇,氛围与主厨技艺令人印象深刻。负面评价则指出部分体验中食物油腻、味道平淡,服务冷漠或缺乏交流,且上菜节奏过快导致用餐不适。尽管有评论认为其值得米其林星级,但也有食客对两星评级表示质疑,认为性价比不高或体验平庸。
适合追求极致新鲜食材与主厨互动的食客,但需提前预订并留意个人对用餐节奏的偏好。
★★ MichelinTabelog 金黑珍珠二钻¥¥¥¥Japanese
In Kyoto, the chef acquired knowledge of Japanese cuisine; in his native Shiga, the uniqueness of fondly remembered country cooking. The sprouting of flowering plants, the spirit of wild animals, the shifting of the seasons in the rural hillscapes, all have their say in the menu. The vividly colourful hassun platters are lavish yet delicate. The intention in hot-pot cooking is to bring a party together through the magic of a single flavour. Gracious service, sparing no detail, is the true pleasure here.
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French
Satoru Asahina pursues a gastronomy of ‘traditional heritage with modern innovation’. He delves into the history of French cuisine to reconstruct ancient recipes with his own interpretations. The prix fixe meal begins with a colourful amuse-bouche and proceeds to plates adorned with multi-layered culinary creations. Consommé pressed through a siphon with a flourish and desserts paraded on trolleys catch the eye. Classic cuisine tuned up to point to the future.
★★ Michelin黑珍珠二钻¥¥¥¥Japanese
Katsuhiro Onodera unearths exquisite flavours by combining the barest minimum of ingredients. The starting point for his creativity is his Tohoku hometown of Kesennuma, where he grew up surrounded by mountains on one side and ocean on the other. Turban shell and bamboo shoot soup, served in seashells, is a homegrown greeting to welcome the spring. Crab baked in the shell and hot pots are somehow hearty and delicate at the same time. The dishes engage all five senses, leaving lasting memories of what you ate.
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
Shinji Kanesaka’s watchword is iki, a word spanning a wonderful variety of meanings. Depending on the character it’s written with, it can mean ‘living’, ‘fresh’ or ‘stylish’. Steady, daily accumulation of learning shows in the way the craftsman lives his life. The leadership by which he cultivates his young staff is outstanding. Kanesaka orients his team toward a common goal, burnishing their character, with each team member playing an appointed role. He sharpens his skills and those of his team, knowing that all their training culminates in that single moment – a piece of sushi.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 3.9/5 · 100 条
位于银座的Sushi Kanesaka是米其林二星餐厅,以正统寿司和优质食材著称。多数食客赞赏其新鲜的海鲜、精致的料理及厨师的专注服务,氛围私密且具匠心。然而,部分评论指出性价比偏低,价格高昂但分量有限。服务方面,虽整体专业,但有迟到被拒或过敏处理不当的负面反馈。用餐节奏紧凑,对准时要求严格。总体而言,这是一次高品质但需提前规划且对预算敏感的用餐体验。
适合追求正宗高品质寿司且预算充足的食客,务必提前预订并严守时间。
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Tempura
Insatiable curiosity about all things tempura is this restaurant’s driving force. The chef blazes his own trail, unencumbered by convention. In a one-of-a-kind technique, the chef prepares his batter using two types of water as well as liquid nitrogen. One menu item features chilled sea urchin on deep-fried perilla leaf, creating a contrast of cold and hot. Inventive dishes are slipped in between menu items, varying the pace. The chef takes pride in offering an extensive range of tempura pieces, letting his imagination run free.
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French, Contemporary
A detached, glass-walled house stands across from a park; ascend the stairs adjacent to the kitchen and you reach a dining room with a Scandinavian interior. The prix fixe menu begins with tea in season. The restaurant’s name refers to ‘friends who will drink tea together always’, referring to the circle of guests, staff and food producers. The chef’s aim is to serve food that is simple yet original. Both service and kitchen staff bring the food to your table.
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
A sign with a crane’s head in profile against the sun marks the modern Japanese exterior. Enter the dining room, and piped jazz music fills an interior decorated with Western paintings. Red and white keynotes in the décor denote the rising sun. Cuisine is ‘modern classic’, a theme born of the sensibility the chef cultivated overseas. The aim is to offer modulation in temperature, beguiling aromas, and a light, comfortable feeling after dining. Refined items of refreshing originality suggest the future of Japanese cuisine.
★★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
Ensui means ‘flame and water’, celebrating the two starting points of Japanese cuisine: charcoal flame and water for soup stock. The pride of the house is its stew. Using water brought all the way from Kagoshima, dashi stock is drawn from aged kombu and high-grade bonito flakes. The soup ingredients are suffused with the aroma of charcoal, completing the theme. With the practiced hands of a craftsman, the chef weaves the soup ingredients and the soup broth into a harmonious whole. A natural curiosity drives him to scour producing regions for the best ingredients. A personal journey expressed t
★★ MichelinTabelog 金¥¥¥¥Japanese
The name combines two of the four characters of Haruhiko Yamamoto’s name. The chef’s approach to cuisine and commitment to entertaining guests were both learned from his mentor in Gifu. He is also enthusiastic about guiding the next generation, as shown by the smiles and positive attitude of his young crew. Yamamoto may surprise with innovative dishes, but with wansashi—the pairing of sashimi and soup, considered the essence of Japanese cuisine—he stays true to tradition. Each item is the product of painstaking effort the customer never sees.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French, Contemporary
For Joël Robuchon, ‘emperor of French cuisine’, this eponymous restaurant is the jewel in the crown of the company. Kenichiro Sekiya, recipient of the prestigious Meilleurs Ouvriers de France (MOF) and heir to both the spirit and cuisine of his famous mentor, uses Japanese ingredients to breathe new life into French gastronomy. His interpretation of Le Caviar Imperial evolves from generation to generation. Even the trolley service is the pinnacle of luxury. A table of magnificence as befits the hall of the emperor.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.5/5 · 100 条
Joël Robuchon位于目黑,连续18年保持米其林三星,以精致法式大餐和优雅氛围著称。多数食客赞赏食物品质、服务及酒单,特别提及面包无限供应、奶酪与甜点推车以及创意摆盘。然而,部分评论指出性价比一般,存在上菜节奏不均、座位安排与预期不符或个别卫生问题(如飞虫)。整体体验高端但评价两极,适合追求经典法餐仪式感且对细节敏感的食客。
适合重视经典法式烹饪技艺与用餐仪式感的特殊场合聚餐。
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
Rooted in the fundamentals of Japanese cuisine, the chef brings individuality to simple presentations. Ingredients arrive from his native Nagano. Sarashina soba from Matsumoto is paired with seasonal produce, while Koshihikari rice from northern Nagano is prepared as takikomi-gohan. The meal concludes with a tomewan, a closing soup, enriched with Shinshu miso. The restaurant’s name is the credo his mentor left him, to cook with ‘simple honesty’, an approach that shines through in every dish.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
Having been born and raised overseas, the chef chose the path of the sushi artisan out of a desire to work in a field that involves Japan’s traditions and culture. Among the appetisers, standard items include simmered monkfish liver and steamed abalone. Sushi toppings start with the subtler flavours and proceed to bolder ones, paired with white-vinegar or red-vinegar sushi rice according to topping. Pioneering directions in modern sushi include squid glazed with salt water mixed with white birch sap and conger eel paired with an herbal liquor reduction.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
‘Fushikino’ is a mashup of two words, one referring to a Zen phrase, and the other meaning ‘mysterious’. Together, they suggest things that never before existed. The restaurant’s aim is to create something unprecedented, an unexpected culinary experience made possible through the trinity of food, sake and utensils. The menu lists familiar items of Japanese cuisine, but one-of-a-kind touches manifest in subtle details, such as onion soy sauce and aged ponzu sauce. Drink pairings of one cup per dish, served in sake cups lovingly produced by modern artists, are an entertaining grace note.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
Amid the refinement of a dignified tea arbour, the chef cooks with sincere devotion. His attentiveness derives from his early work at a ryotei, where he was a doorman in charge of footwear. Tanimoto’s forte is charcoal grilling, preparing each ingredient with the strictest attention. The meal ends with a generous lineup of various rice dishes including, white rice, takikomi-gohan and chazuke, followed by tea poured by the chef himself. The spirit of graceful service brings satisfaction to the depths of the soul.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French, Contemporary
The name ‘L’ÉTERRE’ is a mashup of two French words: ‘l’éterne’ meaning ‘eternity’, and ‘la terre’ meaning ‘the earth’. It encapsulates the restaurant’s determination never to stop gathering the bounty of the earth and crafting delicious cuisine from it. Japan is a country surrounded by sea, and L’ÉTERRE makes full use of this, focusing on seafood dishes. Vegetables and meat highlight the abundance of their terroirs, grilled sometimes over charcoal or firewood, sometimes over straw. Time-honoured cooking methods are eternal as well.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
The counter spreads like a fan, so guests surround the kitchen. Chef and apprentice serve snacks and nigiri in turn, moving in perfect harmony. The house snack is iwashi-isobemaki, bite-sized pieces of pilchard wrapped in nori. Old-school sushi craftsmanship is woven in, such as spring sea bream topped with sweetened egg yolk flakes and lean tuna paired with mustard. In mutual support between restaurateur and farmers, sushi rice comes from the chef’s native Noto Peninsula. The team keeps the sushi smoothly flowing with deft motions, serving each guest with just the right intervals. ‘Takumi’ me
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
Makoto Onozawa finds inventive ways to break the mould while respecting tradition. Soup dishes and sashimi uphold the basics, reassuring the diner. Broiled unagi seasoned in soy-based sweet sauce is served together with broiled unseasoned unagi for a special treat. Rolled sushi of tuna and pickled daikon radish are served in the intervals, bringing satisfaction. The meal concludes on two comfort-food notes: soba and curry. Breaking tradition, after all, is about seeing the job to completion.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Crab Specialities
Love of shellfish above all else led the chef of Ubuka to tread the culinary path. He has done his homework, and the results show in a menu filled with crab and prawn suggestions. Some items follow kaiseki style, while others are Western in influence. Terrine of hair crab is an idea borrowed from French cuisine; fried prawns are immersed in sauce américaine. The meal concludes with crab and vegetables on rice cooked in an earthenware pot. Portions are generous to ensure guests can fully appreciate their shellfish. No wonder this restaurant is so busy.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
Down a narrow blind alley in a corner of Arakicho known for its dining spots, a traditional lantern casts a soft glow. Inside, the intimate space offers counter seating only, where the chef demonstrates the refined techniques of kappo. The menu favours individuality over formality. With the first toast in mind, fried dishes appear early in the meal. Steamed sushi seasoned with red vinegar is paired with seasonal seafood, and house-made soba is another highlight. The generosity of each portion adds to the satisfaction.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
Chef Shinsuke Ishii brings the passion of the producers to your table with his unique recipes. Using underutilised fish species and local ingredients, he passionately conveys human connections. The fish wrapped in pie pastry, resembling taiyaki, hides a playful twist within its sophistication. The chef personally serves his creations, and the whole team unites to engage with guests. The dining experience is filled with energy and a sense of togetherness.
★ MichelinTabelog 金¥¥¥Thai
Thai culinary culture interpreted through Japanese ingredients. She moved to Bangkok and honed her culinary skills, now offer her cuisine prix fixe. Chopped mix of pomelo and seafood derives from the table of the royal court; rice vermicelli yakisoba is inspired by Bangkok street food. Curries are prepared with fresh-pressed coconut milk. Regional cuisines are reproduced using fermented or matured homemade seasonings. KHAO overflows with inquisitiveness and passion for Thai cuisine.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 3.9/5 · 87 条
KHAO位于新宿Lumine地下,以泰式街头风格著称。食物方面,绿咖喱和汤面评价较高,但部分顾客认为菜品偏日式或分量不足,且存在面条切段等细节问题。服务高效热情,店员多为泰国人,出餐快。环境拥挤热闹,类似曼谷街头,适合快速用餐,但缺乏私密性。整体性价比受争议,有人觉得实惠,也有人认为价格偏高。
适合喜欢热闹街头氛围、追求快速用餐的单人食客,介意拥挤或追求精致体验者慎选。
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French
The Tokyo location was born from a meeting between the founder of the Hotel New Otani and the owner of the Paris flagship. The original restaurant, established in 1582, is said to be where the fork was first introduced. The legendary ‘Three Emperors Dinner’ at the 1867 Paris Exposition remains a historic milestone. Among the enduring specialities, the Three Emperors- style goose foie gras remains a constant. This stage for haute cuisine continues to foster connections and inspire harmony.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.4/5 · 100 条
Tour D'Argent Tokyo以豪华氛围和卓越服务著称,是体验正统法式餐饮的热门选择。食物整体质量较高,招牌鸭肉菜肴及鹅肝受到好评,部分食客认为其风味经典且令人满意。然而,也有负面评价指出菜品缺乏惊喜感,个别海鲜料理表现平平,甚至被指味道普通。尽管服务备受赞誉,但部分顾客对性价比存疑,认为价格偏高或存在额外收费争议。总体而言,这里适合追求传统法式体验与精致环境的食客,但对创新或高性价比有较高期待的游客可能会感到失望。
适合重视传统法式体验、豪华环境及优质服务的食客,但不适合追求高性价比或创新菜品的游客。
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
In pursuit of new heights, the chef relocated to a new setting, riding the waves of change with his love for the sea, fish, and surfing. His appetisers showcase originality and creativity, with tuna sukiyaki as a prime example. For nigiri, however, he remains committed to orthodox techniques, crafting a menu with a carefully measured rhythm. The spotlight is on tuna, presented in a trio of lean, medium, and fatty cuts. Even the vinegared rice is finely tuned to complement the fish’s rich flavours.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
‘The look surprises, the taste reassures.’ The chef’s passion for creativity makes his culinary spirit unique. Decoratively arranged sashimi are briefly heated to draw out moisture. The chef doesn’t serve soup dishes, as much of his cooking tailors the dashi stock to each dish. His freewheeling personality makes the evening fun, while the folk-art vibe of the interior, including a chest of drawers inherited from the chef’s grandparents, fills the air with memories and the warmth of family.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
The Chinese character for ‘food’ combines the characters for ‘person’ and ‘good’, hence the saying of Akasaka Shimabukuro, ‘food makes us better’. With gratitude for the bonds he forms with guests and those around him, the chef follows his own culinary path. The mellow flavour of the clear broth used in wanmono derives from shaved bonito flakes. Soba with dried mullet roe, interposed between menu items, and juwari soba, served at the end, are house creations using native species of buckwheat. The calligraphy on the wall says ‘go-en’, ‘personal connections’, echoing the restaurant’s whole-heart
★ MichelinTabelog 银¥¥¥¥Sushi
The omakase set menu begins with medium-fatty tuna, a single piece of sushi that epitomises the pride of the sushi artisan. It testifies to the passion with which he prepares his tuna, celebrates the strong bond of trust between him and his wholesaler, encapsulates his gratitude for human relationships and embodies the teachings of his mentor. Items such as kappamaki, a sushi roll stuffed with lashings of cucumber, and rolled omelette in hot dashi attest to character as well as skill. The bustle of the cooks’ activity behind the counter brings satisfaction to the soul as well as the belly.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Chinese
With a name that reflects a desire to cherish ingredients, producers and the culinary craft of Chinese cuisine, ‘itsuka’ embodies a spirit of care and respect. Classic Chinese dishes are thoughtfully prepared using Japanese ingredients. The appetiser platter presents a medley from land and sea, enhanced with house-made doubanjiang and mala sauce to create a nuanced interplay of bold and delicate flavours. Sichuan cuisine is guided by the philosophy of ‘one dish, one character’ and ‘for a hundred dishes, a hundred flavours’, while Taiwanese cuisine is celebrated for drawing out the natural dept
★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
Tenoshima is named after Teshima, the island where the chef’s father was born. As he wields his skills in the kitchen, he remains conscious of ingredients and techniques deeply rooted on the island. Nyumen, a savoury noodle soup, is prepared with dried sardine broth for a beloved taste of home. Using underused fish species supports both sustainability and the livelihoods of fishermen. Bozushi reflects his experience at Kyoto’s Kikunoi. Driven by the chef’s wealth of experience, Tenoshima is broadening the purview of Japanese cuisine.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
The round logo on the tabletop menu encapsulates the chef’s vision. The varying thickness of the line suggests contrasts between sharp and subtle flavours; the circle declares that the entire prix fixe menu expresses the cuisine as a whole. Sauces and cooking focus on the classic; the fascination with ingredients is a trait cultivated during the chef’s apprenticeship in France. The combination of the chef’s learned skills and passion for cuisine gives rise to a style all his own.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
The chef grew up eating vegetables from the family garden in Yamagata and the restaurant is the fulfilment of a dream that one day he would serve cuisine made with vegetables grown by his parents. Deep-fried tofu leavened with those veggies brings the seasons of his hometown to the table. His affection for his ingredients inspired him to prepare kombu soy sauce for his sashimi, reusing the kombu from the soup stock. Akanezaka, the older name for Akasaka meaning ‘Red Hill’, conjures crimson associations of sunrise and sunset.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French, Contemporary
‘Circular gastronomy’ from the chef of Mirazur in southern France. Prix fixe menus are composed from four themes—roots, leaves, flowers and fruits—expressing the beauty of nature and the cycle that happens in our world. The fare is modern French woven from Japanese ingredients, but it also beguiles with influences from the chef’s native Argentina, such as tapas and asado. Having stretched out his roots in southern France and budded leaves of creativity, the chef has blossomed in Otemachi.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French
To scale greater heights in the culinary world, Hideyuki Shibata moved his establishment to Minami-Aoyama. The shop’s name is an amalgam of marge, French for ‘margin’, ‘frame’ or ‘blank canvas’, and the English word ‘merge’. Within its margins, mærge offers a fusion of people, things and ideas from around the world. Prix fixe menus bring together two distinct styles, both honouring traditional, classic French fare and incorporating fresh, imaginative aspects. Inherited French techniques and a modern sensibility merge within this restaurant’s frame.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French, Contemporary
Chef Guillaume Bracaval expresses the Japanese landscape in his cuisine. Travelling across the country to familiarise himself with ingredients, he experienced its abundant nature first-hand. The map of Japan indicating where all his ingredients come from traces his journey. Wanting to create delicate and healthy dishes, he limits his use of butter and cream. Desserts inspired by contemporary art are highly original. Perched on the hotel’s top floor, the dining room affords stunning views of the city below.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
The chef’s gastronomic experience includes stints in Sydney and New York. The creative flair he acquired along the way finds expression in the imaginative freedom of his menu. Appetiser of sea urchin and tuna is paired with caviar. Hassun platters incorporate unique choices such as spring rolls and roasted pork fillet. Broiled seafood and grills of eel and wagyu are accented by the aroma of bincho charcoal. The meal wraps up with handmade soba or rice in clay pots available on request.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
The look of the establishment is a ‘modern-day tearoom’, with concrete walls and glass-enclosed kitchen. The operation is run by the proprietor and the sommelier, both of whom have experience working in Japanese restaurants in Paris. From the proprietor’s native Tokushima come supplies of seafood, citrus fruits and rice. Another Tokushima influence is the use of Awa bancha, a fermented tea. Nogizaka Shin hosts tasting events every month, featuring discussions about pairings with wines and Japanese sake. The teamwork between chef and sommelier points to the future of kappo.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
The concept is ‘a place that weaves a tale of an encounter between earth and sea’. ESTERRE expresses the terroir of Japan through the supervision of Alain Ducasse, a legend of the gastronomic world. Entrusted with the kitchen is Kei Kojima, who conjures fare that is both healthful and flavourful. Vegetables, selected in the markets of Kamakura, are colourful and fresh. Ingredients wreathed in the fragrance of a charcoal flame display a quintessentially Japanese approach.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
Black-and-white photos of the palace of Versailles adorn the walls; the palace symbolises the era when France was at the height of its splendour, and pays homage to the restaurant’s name, which means 'glory'. Paying respect to the development of French cuisine from the dishes favoured by the royal court, the chef adds a modern twist with his own hand, blending classic influences with contemporary elements. The pairings of international wines are another reflection of his modern sensibility.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Austrian
Along the path to licensed-chef status, the chef encountered Austrian cuisine. Intrigued by this little-known food genre, he resolved to apprentice in its native land. The concept is traditional fare with a modern update. Terrine of foie gras paired with cacao and jam is a combination inspired by Sachertorte, a dessert that originated in Vienna. Famed Viennese china and glasses and classical music in the background befit a city of fine arts.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
The chef honed both his technical skills and also the spirit of the sushi craftsman at a long-established restaurant. A devotee of fish from Tokyo Bay, he regularly visits fishing ports, cultivating close ties with local fishermen that pay off in a supply of quality catch. Fish is meticulously prepared, whether cured in kombu or vinegar, or simmered. He pours his passion into Edo-style techniques, seasoning the sushi rice with red vinegar and salt. Tuna takes centre stage, while the nigiri begins with toro and concludes with tekkamaki.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
Sit down at the counter, and the calligraphy on the wall catches the eye. A gift from the chef’s mentor, it reads ‘Jikishin’, meaning ‘true heart’, a Zen exhortation to disengage from worldly attachments and maintain a pure spirit unsullied by petty distractions. The omakase set menu begins with items reflecting the chef’s experience with Kyoto cuisine, then proceeds to sushi. The beguiling texture of the sushi rice, which leaves a lingering sweetness, derives from a combination of rice from both this year’s and last year’s harvests. Sushi moulded with unwavering conviction and an honest heart
★ Michelin¥¥¥French, French Contemporary
‘Héritage by Kei Kobayashi’ is not just a name: The chef has made it his mission to honour and give thanks to the French culinary culture and pass it on to future generations through his eponymous restaurant. Venerable standards such as pâté en croûte, roast dovelet and vacherin are prepared in the traditional way but given a modern arrangement. Homage to the classics and the hospitality of the hotel combine to open new horizons in gastronomy.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
The framed motto reads, roughly, ‘Begin at the start, and when you get to the end, begin again with the spirit of the novice.’ Taking to heart this aphorism of tea master Sen no Rikyū, the chef toils at his craft with the sincerity of a beginner. He encountered this spirit in Kyoto, where he learned the art of chakaiseki. Rice is served the moment it is ready, so guests can observe the changes in it as the steam billows. Handmade sweets conclude the meal, following the etiquette of the wabicha style of the tea ceremony. Strong matcha also reflects the essence of the Way of Tea.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
Applying experience in Paris and Copenhagen, the chef layers Scandinavian innovation on top of Japanese ingredients and the French classics. One embodiment of these influences is the foie gras torchon, an encounter between Kakegawa tea from the chef’s hometown and foie gras. Mushrooms delivered from producers in Shizuoka Prefecture are fermented and made into a soup. Modern French cuisine bursting with creativity, the chef’s roots and the bounty of food producers overlay each other to form a winning combination.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
Creative courses channel the free spirit the chef cultivated in Paris. Venturing into new domains of French cooking, le sputnik dives deep into techniques such as such as ageing, fermenting and extracting. Dessert elements such as tuiles find their way into cooking, showcasing the chef’s patisserie experience with intricate recipes and three-dimensional arrangements. Beets with foie gras, arranged into a crimson rose, form an oeuvre of stunning beauty.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
Takuto Murota procures ingredients himself, hunting game in the mountains and growing vegetables in his home garden. Harmonious coexistence with nature is the theme of his cooking and nowhere is this conviction more evident than in his game dishes. Meat is grilled, bones and entrails made into sauces; nothing edible is wasted. Venison blood macarons have become emblematic of LATURE. Classic cuisine with a touch of modern sensibility conveys respect for life.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
The crest on the shop curtain depicts a Eurasian magpie, the official bird of Saga Prefecture, in flight. The same motif is embroidered on the cooks’ whites. From his native Saga, the chef sources rice, Imari beef and yuzu pepper. Serving vessels of Karatsu and mid-Edo-period Imari are a point of pride. In a nod to Osaka experience, each dish is served once the previous one has been consumed. No food is wasted, and for the same reason decorative vegetation is never used. Grilled items are served with rice and soup, as in a set meal, expressing the restaurant's free-spirited character.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
Drawing on techniques honed in Japanese cuisine and guided by a keen curiosity, the chef explores inventive approaches to ingredients from his own unique perspective. Served as an interlude, niebana, half-steamed rice, is cooked in kombu dashi to incorporate its umami. Fried dishes are coated in rice flour and prepared as kosen-age, speckled with cracker crumbs, for added aroma. The chef learned tradition at a Kyoto ryotei and innovation at a Tokyo kappo, a journey reflected in his menus.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
MONOLITH links the splendour of classic cuisine to the future. Pastry-wrapped meat symbolises this connection – the diner can choose from several types. Hewing close to time-honoured recipes, beef and lamb are dressed in a Madeira wine and truffle sauce, while pigeon is prepared in a rich salmis. Sauce is assiduously reduced and poured unstintingly, in true orthodox style. Respect for tradition and the classics, eloquently expressed through cooking.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French
Although rooted in French techniques, the cuisine here minimises butter and cream, allowing the natural aromas and flavours of the ingredients to shine in a lighter finish. Chilled oysters with seawater and citrus jelly, as well as kadaif-wrapped john dory, have become the chef’s signature dishes. A plant-based vegan course also reflects his philosophy. ‘Edition’ speaks to his approach of constantly editing and refining recipes, always updating them.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.4/5 · 75 条
Édition Koji Shimomura位于港区,主打融合法日风味的精致料理。多数食客称赞其食材新鲜(如长崎牡蛎、伊比利亚猪肉)及摆盘艺术,氛围优雅适合纪念日。然而,负面评价指出部分体验存在服务瑕疵,如点单错误、侍酒师态度冷淡或推销行为,且有人觉得性价比不高,认为食物虽好但缺乏记忆点,价格偏高。
适合追求精致法日融合料理且对服务细节有较高包容度的食客,建议提前确认菜单偏好。
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
PRUNIER is the main dining room of Tokyo Kaikan, a meeting-place cherished for generations. The décor conjures images of fish and flowing water, harking back to the restaurant’s earliest days when it specialised in seafood. Here you can enjoy modern French cuisine that reflects the shifting seasons, presented in an elegant setting. Sole bonne femme, handed down from generations of head chefs, keeps a tradition alive and well. Gracious service adds an extra touch to the meal.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
Back when there weren’t many sushi restaurants in Nishi-Azabu, the chef was determined to blaze a trail here. And ‘blaze a trail’ is basically what Taku means. The same trailblazing was what led him to be among the first sushi chefs to hire a sommelier, and to spread sushi culture in Hawaii. The variety of his omakase set meals, which start at 30 items, is eye-popping. Nigiri items alternate with drinking snacks. Sushi rice may be seasoned with white or red vinegar, depending on the fish topping—another trailblazing move.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.7/5 · 66 条
Nishiazabu Taku位于港区,以寿司和omakase闻名。多数评论盛赞其卓越的海鲜品质、精致的摆盘及厨师的专业技艺,部分食客称其为“ nirvana”。服务方面,厨师通常提供英语讲解并关注细节(如左撇子需求),但亦有反馈指出厨师更倾向于与日本本地顾客交流。氛围温馨舒适,但少数负面评价提及被安排至设施较简陋的“ Annex”区域,且该区域酒单选择有限,引发不满。整体而言,食物质量和服务是主要亮点,但预订时需留意座位安排以避免体验落差。
适合追求高品质寿司体验且能接受可能分配至附属区域的食客。
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
As a boy, Chef Kenichi Nemoto was an enthusiastic angler, and seafood is the focus of the prix fixe menus he arranges. To ensure variety, Nemoto varies his preparation styles: frites, soups, butter roasting, and so on. In gratitude to the natural world of sea and mountain where he encounters his ingredients, he wastes nothing. The chef is earnest in his relations with producers, such as building bonds of trust with the fishermen of Shimoda.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French
The name of the restaurant means ‘highest compliment’ or ‘apex’. The pinnacle of cuisine, perched on the top floor of a soaring skyscraper, is the concept here. The precepts of apothéose are a trinity: respect for French culinary culture; a deep spirit of inquiry into Japanese ingredients; and devotion to knowing the present moment. Willingness to experiment, unconstrained by convention, ensures customers understand the joys of food.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
The name is both a play on the owner’s name and a prayer for everlasting prosperity. The menu combines kaiseki and beef, showcasing Japan’s famous wagyu. Tsukuri and wanmono start the evening, celebrating the season. A procession of wagyu variations follows: beef-tail spring rolls, char-grilled tongue, and a main dish of beef cutlet. Japanese and beef dishes delight in equal measure.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Sushi
Asakusa is a second hometown for the chef, who has lived here since his apprenticeship. He inherited both spirit and skill, along with tools and serving ware, from his mentor. He reveres the old teachings of the sushi world but does add a few twists of his own. He adds sweet potato shochu to rich soy syrup; to rolled omelette, he adds soy milk. The character for the chef’s surname of ‘Oku’ developed from a combination of the characters for ‘house’, ‘rice’ and ‘palm of hand’; a sign, he contends, that he was destined to run a place where he would fashion rice meals with his hands.
★ MichelinTabelog 银黑珍珠三钻¥¥¥French, Contemporary
Red and black are the thematic colours of L’ATELIER de Joël Robuchon. The classic Robuchon menu spins a tale like a 19th-century French novel. The menu ranges from famous specialities of years gone by to new arrangements incorporating seasonal Japanese ingredients. This really is ‘Joël Robuchon’s atelier’, where the genius honed his concept of French gastronomy.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.3/5 · 100 条
位于东京六本木之丘的Joël Robuchon餐厅以开放式厨房和吧台座位为特色,提供当代法式料理。多数食客称赞其食材新鲜、口味顶级,尤其是鱼子酱和烘焙点心备受好评,氛围轻松且具社交感。然而,部分评论指出近期服务存在不足,如响应迟缓或态度冷淡,且环境有时过热。关于性价比,观点两极分化:有人认为物有所值,也有人觉得价格偏高或菜品平庸。总体而言,这是一次高端但体验可能波动的用餐选择。
适合追求顶级法式风味且能包容潜在服务波动的食客。
★ MichelinTabelog 银¥¥¥¥French
Thierry Voisin leads the main dining room here at the Imperial Hotel. True to its name, Les Saisons celebrates the finest ingredients of each season. Built on a classical French foundation and enriched with Japanese ingredients, the cuisine seeks harmony through sweetness, acidity and umami on every plate. The classical-modern setting offers a moment of timeless elegance. In keeping with the restaurant’s seasonal theme, the four private rooms are named Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
‘Tradition and innovation always travel together’ is the credo of the Imperial Hotel. ‘Growth and happiness for the future’ is the motto of the Ishikawa Group. Together the partners founded Torakuro, whose cuisine is guided by both convictions. French techniques such as consommé and confit are overlaid with Japanese traditions like dashi soup stock and char-grilling. One of the Imperial Hotel’s founders, Eiichi Shibusawa, once said, ‘Serve the customer courteously and you create a memory for a lifetime’. Here, that spirit is taken to heart.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
With his expertise refined at a Kyoto cuisine restaurant, the chef emphasises seasonal ingredients, showcasing his experience in dishes that highlight their finest qualities. He starts with delicacies and aemono appetisers designed to enhance the enjoyment of sake. The warm boiled wild mustard greens with deep-fried tofu is a Sasada speciality perfected over many years. All the dishes are carefully prepared with a focus on simplicity, showcasing the chef’s humble personality and dedication to his craft.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Italian
A restaurant under the supervision of Niko Romito, whose unique philosophy is blazing a trail through the Italian culinary world. From the concept of ‘authentic yet contemporary’, Il Ristorante - Niko Romito brings together fare from every region of Italy. Vegetable soup is prepared without water; instead, moisture is extracted from the ingredients, yielding a pure expression of flavour. Spaghetti pomodoro features concentrated essence of tomato. The pursuit of the flavours and essence of Italy.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.8/5 · 100 条
Il Ristorante - Niko Romito 以精致的意大利料理和奢华雅致的花园氛围著称,适合情侣约会或纪念日庆祝。食物呈现精美,部分食客盛赞其招牌腌海鲷与鱼子酱及丰富的早午餐套餐,但亦有反馈指出个别主菜口味奇特、分量偏小且菜单更新频率低。服务总体备受好评,员工热情周到,但少数评论提及斟酒礼仪、上菜动线及预订沟通存在不足,需加强专业培训。尽管环境优雅、细节考究,但部分顾客认为性价比一般,且极端负面评价显示个别体验存在严重失误。
适合追求精致意餐与浪漫花园环境的特殊场合用餐者,建议提前确认服务细节。
★ Michelin¥¥¥Contemporary
‘Harmony’ and ‘circulation’ are the keywords of this dining experience. Through his partnerships with farmers, the chef returns compost to revitalise the soil. The prix fixe presentation starts with a bowl of soup. Vegetable ends are used in the soup’s creation, expressing a wish for a society that doesn’t waste food. Prepared with French techniques, the fare is simple and light. The grey of the interior creates something of a laboratory feel.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
Taking pride in domestic ingredients, the restaurant presents a distinctly Japanese approach to French cuisine. Dishes are light, with restrained use of fats and oils in line with modern tastes. Seasonal menus highlight fruits such as peaches and strawberries from local farmers, making the most of their natural character. Courses featuring sweetfish, chestnuts and mushrooms are also tempting. ‘La Paix’ means peace, expressing a wish for a harmonious table where producers and chef come together in mutual understanding through food.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
Auspicious kumiko woodwork patterns, a counter lined with lacquered trays: the modern Japanese décor is in keeping with the culinary theme of ‘wakon yosai’ or ‘Japanese spirit with Western learning’. Cooking is mainly done over wood flame. Japanese seasons and ingredients, wrapped in French tradition and philosophy, all wreathed in the smoky aroma of firewood. Mētis is a goddess of wisdom in classical Greek mythology; perhaps she inspires the chef as he concentrates his own wisdom to weave delicious cuisine.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Chinese
The food culture of Hong Kong is summed up in a simple proverb: Sik dak hai fuk: “Eating is a blessing.” The Hong Kong–born chef, known only as ‘Tommy’, delights in staging the daily ritual of gathering around the dinner table and merrily sharing a meal. He puts each ingredient on display as he cooks heaping platters of food and shares it out among his guests. Freshly roasted pork fillet and crispy chicken are flavours straight from his native city.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Contemporary
The concept is a fusion of French cuisine with the bounty of Japanese foodstuffs. Meat is oven-roasted and smoked with straw; sauces are accented with bonito stock; and unripe pepper takes the place of black pepper. In the restaurant’s name, ‘haku’ suggests a pure feeling towards cooking, and ‘nei’ represents ‘meticulous’ work. Millefeuille de crêpes, a dessert crafted by patiently adding layer after layer, embodies that commitment.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
What Kanako Wakimoto aims to deliver is simple, honest deliciousness. Ingredients in season are picked when they are ripe, reaping maximum nutrition in each season. The chef’s sweeping selection of meat dishes, rice dishes and sweets stems from her earnest desire to please the customer. To suggest closeness to nature, Wakimoto named her restaurant Sorahana, ‘Sky Flower’. As she devotes herself to her cooking, Wakimoto is in her element, like flowers blooming in a field under the sky.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
The chef defends the traditions and skills of Edo-style sushi while showing creativity with some innovations of his own. Japanese halfbeak and horse mackerel are accented with ginger and mirin–soy reduction; simmered conger eel is served both salted and dipped in eel sauce for taste comparison. Nigiri is shaped using rice seasoned with red vinegar—a showcase of techniques cultivated over years of experience. Treading the path of the sushi chef was a dream in his teenage years. Steady devotion to craft is a lesson learned from sushi.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Chinese
Service consists of many dishes in small quantities, hence the name. Creativity abounds, inspired by ingredients and preparation methods from numerous countries. Steamed spicy beef rather than chicken, chicken-wings stuffed with foie gras, and Peking duck wrapped in kadaif pastry show off Series’ talent for arrangement. To accentuate the variety of culinary styles, pairings range widely as well. Pair wine, sake or a cocktail with your meal.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
True to his creed, ‘Life resides in cooking that is free of affectation’, the chef strives to serve food that is honest and down-to-earth. Paying close attention to the strength of his cooking flame, he sources the flavours of each season—bamboo shoots, pike conger, matsutake mushrooms, and puffer fish—and slow-cooks them over charcoal. Indian-ink paintings behind the counter depict lotuses in each season. In the language of flowers, the lotus represents a pure and chaste spirit. The chef’s honesty and respect for foodstuffs are reflected in his carefully pared-down creations.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Yakitori
A man of few words, the chef fixes his attention on his grill. He focuses on every detail of yakitori—the state of the charcoal, how the skewers are assembled and grilled—pursuing the subtleties of a cuisine. His favoured type of chicken is game fowl, prized for its supple texture and rich flavour. It is seasoned with a salt base and modulated with added chicken fat or vinegar, then wreathed in smoke as it cooks on the grill. Skewers are interspersed with chicken-based snacks such as cold chicken breast and mincemeat potato salad. A procession of dishes of lively originality.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
A restaurant by Dominique Bouchet, an advocate of ‘tradition with progress’. The kitchen is entrusted to a Japanese chef. The two menus offer distinct concepts: ‘Générations’ expresses a particularly Japanese sense of seasonality through the ingredients, while ‘Héritage’ comprises specialities from his time in France, reflecting Bouchet’s desire to pass his legacy on to the next generation.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Sushi
The omakase set menu begins with snacks such as steamed abalone, tender-boiled octopus and salt-grilled blackthroat seaperch. The large number of items keeps the sake flowing before the nigirizushi arrives. For the sushi, large-grained rice from the previous year’s harvest is chosen to create a sense of presence, and red vinegar and rice vinegar are mixed in to pair with a wide range of toppings. Pickled tuna, steamed conger eel and kanpyo are painstakingly prepared. Watch the chef work and witness the single-minded devotion of a sushi artisan.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
The menu changes every two weeks, ensuring that guests rarely encounter the same dishes twice. The breadth of ideas and the meticulous creativity behind them are striking. Drawing on Japan’s tradition of the seventy-two micro-seasons, the restaurant follows the rhythms of nature, allowing diners to savour its many blessings. Seasonal flowers arranged on lacquered trays convey the breath of each passing season. A signature dish of the founding chef, iso-yaki abalone is served year-round. Grilled and accompanied by a rich liver sauce, it remains a firm favourite among regular guests.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
The chef leads his team of cooks like the lead goose guiding its flock in flight. Clad in red armbands and snow-white kitchen uniforms, the kitchen team embodies the spirit of Japan. The accent on vegetables echoes the chef’s experience in shojin-ryori, the vegetarian regimen of Buddhist monks. Mutsukari’s repertoire varies widely, from ohitashi, a boiled vegetable side dish, and nikogori, jellied broth of meat or fish, to various deep-fried and grilled foods. Sashimi is dressed with a vinegar and nori jelly. Casual variations make for delightful idiosyncrasies.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Italian, Contemporary
A collaboration between two great Italian exports: fashion and fine dining. Gucci Osteria, a worldwide series of Italian contemporary restaurants, began with a handshake between a Florentine fashion creator and a celebrated chef from Modena. The result is a fusion between the magical world of Gucci, with its trademark green, and the avant-garde sensibilities of Massimo Bottura, a playful yet elegant cuisine that is always on the cutting edge of the times.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Tempura
A tempura eatery run by a father and his two sons. Supplied with fish in season and fresh vegetables, The chef expresses the turning of the seasons through his ingredients. Items are lightly battered and fried in cold-pressed sesame oil to bring forward the flavours of the tempura pieces. Two friers at different temperatures are used according to the needs of each dish; occasionally an item is double-fried, first in medium-hot oil, and then in hot oil. With the experience and skills of a craftsman honed over many years, the chef unerringly delivers the flavours of each season.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Shojin
Being originally located in the grounds of Seishoji Temple is why Daigo began serving shojin ryori. What Nomura inherits as the restaurant’s fourth-generation owner is shojin ryori for gracious service. Note that dried bonito flakes are used in the broth, so the meals are not completely vegetarian. The nutrition and flavour of the vegetables and the sukiya architecture put the mind at ease. Relax and enjoy this moment of tranquillity.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.1/5 · 75 条
位于港区寺庙旁的Daigo提供米其林星级精进料理,以精致素食怀石为特色。多数食客赞赏其食材创意、摆盘精美及传统日式氛围,花园景观与和服侍者服务增添雅致体验。然而,部分评论指出汤底含海鲜成分,并非严格素食;另有负面反馈批评上菜节奏过快、服务态度生硬,且认为菜品分量与价格不符,性价比低。整体评价两极分化,取决于对传统仪式感及素食定义的接受度。
适合追求极致日式传统用餐仪式感和视觉美学的食客,但对严格素食或高性价比有较高要求者需谨慎选择。
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
A Shiga-born chef with deep expertise in fermentation oversees the cuisine, weaving the umami of fermentation into the kaiseki experience while preserving ancient culinary traditions. A staple of the menu is funazushi, a local specialty of Omi, known for its distinctive flavour from fish and rice cured in salt. To make it more approachable, it is paired with a consommé jelly of bear and venison, accented with honey. Seasonal highlights include winter bear hotpot, celebrating the bounty of game meats.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
A restaurant produced by an international giant of the culinary world. In an astute reading of the times, he was among the first to include generous amounts of vegetables and cereals in his creations, dialing back the fats and sugars. As a result, both flavour and postprandial feeling are light. BEIGE Alain Ducasse preaches l’art de vivre through gastronomy in an emporium that exudes elegance, from the beige interior to the Jacquard fabrics and the design inspired by Coco Chanel.
TripAdvisor 评论样本 · 4.3/5 · 100 条
BEIGE Alain Ducasse位于银座香奈儿大厦,主打融合日式风味的法式料理。多数食客赞赏其食材新鲜、调味突出本味及优雅氛围,尤其推荐季节蔬菜与精致甜点。然而,部分评论指出服务略显冷淡,菜品虽稳定但缺乏惊艳感,且存在上菜节奏问题。整体评价两极,有人视其为适合特殊场合的可靠选择,也有人认为性价比不高,味道未达预期。
适合追求优雅环境和稳定高品质法餐的特殊场合用餐,但对极致味觉惊喜或高性价比有较高期待的食客需谨慎考虑。
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French, Contemporary
The chef’s experience as a pâtissier is put to good use as he fuses a medley of ingredients into a harmonious whole. Guests watch with rapt attention as he works his kitchen and serves each item directly. As guests tuck into their meals with expressions of delight and exclamations of ‘Delicious!’, his joy is tangible. The true pleasure of countertop French dining.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Japanese
The chef admired a certain chef in Kyoto as a youth and burnished his skills to try to measure up. That spirit shines in details such as the charcoal brazier and wood-fuelled stove installed in the kitchen. Rice served in clay pots ranges from barely-cooked (niebana: ‘when the first steam rises’) to scorched; enjoy savouring how its character changes depending on the moment it is dished out. White miso soup infuses dashi stock of vegetables and kombu kelp, a staple of shojin ryori. Kyoto vegetables are used in takiawase. The chef breathes Kyoto cuisine into his menu, creating memories that lin
★ Michelin¥¥¥Tempura
Tempura craftsmanship handed down from the chef’s father. The essence of tempura is respected, with just a few unique, imaginative changes added. Omakase set menus display a distinctive flair, with shrimp taking the lead role. The first piece is deep-fried rare, to elicit sweetness. Shiitake mushroom stuffed with minced shrimp pairs the bounty of mountain and ocean for a beguiling texture. Another shrimp piece, with viscera concealed within, exudes a tempting fragrance. The meal concludes with kakiage, tempura of mixed seafood and veggies, with shrimp appearing once more to take a bow. Choose
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Spanish, Contemporary
Zurriola is the name of a beach in San Sebastián, in northern Spain’s Basque Country. By comparing and categorizing various elements like the ocean-surrounded environment and the use of charcoal and firewood, the chef has come to understand their connections and discovered many affinities between Spain and Japan. In his menu, caviar is smoked over grapevines; foie gras is infused with the aroma of Pedro Ximénez grapes. One man’s sensibility expressed through contemporary cuisine.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Chinese
Chinese cuisine cultivated in Japan interweaves with Cantonese cuisine experienced in Hong Kong. The prix fixe menu puts the accent on fresh, hot and fragrant; each course is limited in quantity, permitting a wide variety of items to be served. Congee expresses the daily rhythms of Hong Kong; dim sum includes shrimp wrapped in rice flour and tofu skin. Longtooth grouper and boar are served in hot pots. Striving for harmony among the five flavours, a wide range of sauces, seasonings and fermented foods are skilfully intermingled in this culinary bridge between China and Japan.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥French
Black, white and orange are the tricolore of ‘Watanabe-ism.’ Black represents faith that cannot be tainted; white, the freedom to become any colour; and orange, the flame manipulated by the chef. On offer here is a fusion of French and Edo food cultures. Sobagaki is emulsified using French techniques; local Japanese elements include kaminari-okoshi, a roasted and flavoured mochi cracker; and monaka, a sweet of azuki bean paste sandwiched between crisp wafers. Watanabe-ism has deep roots in Asakusa-Komagata.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Italian
Japan’s wealth of foodstuffs and culture support a creative approach to cuisine. The chef criss-cross Japan to connect farms with dinner tables. Vegan cooking is embraced here, seen as a lifestyle of the future. The principle of connecting to the good earth shines in desserts crafted with respect for nature and the herbs of Japan. ‘Flower tart’, for example, honours the culture of the rural hills. The possibilities of provincial villages presented in Ginza.
★ Michelin¥¥¥French
‘L’affinage’ means ‘maturation, ageing’. The name reflects the chef’s determination to mature as he ages, honing techniques accumulated over many years. Roasted and pan-fried dishes are complemented with sauces—a practice that is the very soul of French cuisine. Cooking methods inherited from generations past are tweaked to appeal to a modern clientele. Hometown cooking is refined and interlaced with distinctive touches, yielding a satisfyingly mature result.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Contemporary, Spanish Contemporary
TOKi is supervised by akordu, a restaurant based in Nara. From its location in Tokyo, TOKi communicates the appeal of Nara to a wider audience through the dining experience. The cornerstone of the prix fixe menu is Yamato-grown produce and locally raised livestock. Refined through Spanish culinary techniques, the dishes are prepared with a light touch. The use of Yoshino Japanese cypress for the interior and Akahada ware for the tableware reflects the culture of the ancient capital. Guests are guided through the distinctive qualities of each region and the stories behind the ingredients.
★ MichelinTabelog 银¥¥¥¥Japanese
The young kitchen team is a blur of motion at this counter kappo establishment. Believing that dining should be fun, the owner greets guests warmly, fostering a congenial atmosphere. The menu sparkles with originality. Oil-cooked dishes, a must-try, extend beyond deep-fried foods. Tsukuri are par-cooked in oil, in a technique known as aburadoshi. Tempura is fried before your eyes, so their aroma and sizzle reach you before the food does. Kakiage, tempura shrimp over rice in a clay pot, draws the meal to a close.
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Beef
The chef’s love of beef began when he was a boy, when his father would cook thick-cut steaks for him. He is a beef evangelist, proclaiming its appeal to the world. His decision to create a ‘meat kappo’ arose from his training in kaiseki. Wagyu beef is used in every Japanese preparation style, including nigiri sushi, char-grilled and shabu-shabu. The beauty of the traditional building, the kimono-clad service and the colourful dinnerware all add to the ambience. Through beef cuisine, Oniku Karyu is spreading the word about Japanese culture.
★ Michelin¥¥¥Tempura
The spirit of the tempura artisan lies in treading the well-worn path of tradition while enlivening it with unique interpretations. Service begins with light-flavoured fish and grows steadily stronger in taste through vegetables to shrimp. The umami of roasted sesame oil enhances lighter-flavoured pieces; stronger-flavoured items are lightly fried in cold-pressed sesame oil. The meal wraps up with an inventive flourish to heighten enjoyment of the season, such as ‘temcha’, a bowl of rice topped with clam tempura steeped in tea, which may be served in spring, or ‘tembara’, shredded tempura of s
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Tempura
Tempura pieces are deep-fried in high heat to draw out moisture for a fragrant coating. Shrimp are served two pieces in succession, fried at different temperatures to contrast the texture of rare and medium. Depending on availability, you might receive two kinds of squid, each imparting a different flavour. On the wall hangs a work of calligraphy — a gift from his mentor — casting a quiet but discerning eye over the apprentices at work. It reads ‘Menkyo Kaiden’: ‘attain full mastery of the arts of our trade’. The words seem to whisper, ‘Catch up, and surpass me.’
★ Michelin¥¥¥¥Japanese
Kousui reflects both the aspiration to reach ever greater heights and is an allusion to the Zen phrase ‘Shoju sennen no midori’, meaning ‘the pine that stays verdant for a thousand years’. Like the pine that remains ever green while constantly changing, the chef believes that continual change is essential to preserve what is timeless and good. With deep respect for tradition, he reflects the seasons and annual observances in his appetisers and hassun platters. Drawing inspiration from ingredients of his native Shizuoka, and from close ties with local producers, he crafts an imaginative menu th