
Kyubei is a sushi restaurant in between Ginza and Shimbashi. A Wall Street Journal article in January of 2008 named it as one of the ten best restaurants in Asia. They have a rule that a sushi chef can serve no more than 6 people. The restaurant consists of multiple floors. Each floor contains just one sushi bar with ~ 12 seats and 2 sushi chefs. So, even though the restaurant is actually large, the ambiance is very intimate.
We ordered the omakase, which basically means the chef makes for you whatever he wants. Be prepared to spend around $200 per person. If you don't want to spend that much, they do have a menu. However, even the cheapest meal, which is 15 pieces of nigiri, will still run you around $120.

We told our sushi chef that we liked toro (fatty tuna). He proceeded to prepare for us piece after piece of perfectly formed sushi. The fish was extraordinarily fresh (Tsujiki fish market is less than a 10 minute walk away); the sushi was cut with exceptional skill; and each nigiri was perfectly formed.


My favorite piece was a lightly seared toro nigiri sushi shown below. It seemed to melt in my mouth with the most decadent flavors. Yummmmm . . . I love good toro.

This uni was sweet, fresh, and had absolutely no off flavors. It was actually quite good. Creamy, sweet, and light. According to another Wall Street Journal article about this restaurant, Kyubei actually invented this particular type of uni sushi (putting uni on top of rice rolled in seaweed).




Over all, we had an incredible meal here. The ambiance is intimate. You get almost personal service from a very experienced sushi chef (they all have to train 12 years before they can come out and make sushi for customers!) The food is unbelievable.
I won't forget this meal soon, and if I ever go back to Japan, I will visit another one of these amazing sushi places (there are still so many to try!)
More articles about Kyubei can be found here and here
I liked the last part of your post, about eating the freshly beheaded shrimp . =) Very nicely put.
ReplyDeleteI plan to take a client out to this restaurant in January. Looking forward to it!
ReplyDeletethe difference between good uni and average uni is about as broad as the Pacific Ocean.
ReplyDeleteGreat blog, I look forward to trying some of the recipes in my not-so-tiny kitchen.
Kyubei is my absolute favorite sushi restaurant in the entire universe. I live in Toronto, lots of sushi but all mediocre. I regularly go to Japan and it truly is an eat-a-thon, starting and ending at Kyubei.
ReplyDeleteWe usually go to the one @ the Hotel Okura, gotten to know the sushi chefs there and always have amazing service. The sweet ebi and the seared toro (they told us it was the cheek) are favorites.