On our recent trip to Japan, we spent 3 days in Tokyo on our way back to Sydney from Hokkaido. C took this opportunity to book us and some friends a spot at Sushiko Honten in Ginza on New Year's Eve. You may recall that C has already been here once and had pretty impressive things to say about it (see his last review here). After his rave review and saying this restaurant has ruined his ability to enjoy sushi in Australia, I was pretty keen to go and check out what all the fuss was about. After all - it's just rice and fish right?
How wrong I was!
Without sounding like a food snob, Sushiko Honten wasn't just a restaurant, but a performance; a theatric experience that is more than just eating what is placed before you. Leaving Sushiko Honten, I had a new found admiration and appreciation of the art of sushi making and Japanese cuisine.
Sushiko Honten has been open for more than 130 years. The restaurant is small and cosy. Understated and simple. Diners are seated around the sushi bar where the chefs work. When we first entered, there was an eerie, awkward silence - as diners sat watching their designated chef work his magic, mesmerised by the skill and performance before them. The experience didn't start and end with the sushi being delivered onto your plate. Rather, the whole meal was a performance by your designated chef - there's very little chatter between diners as everyone is focused on the mastery that is before them.
The first dish was a combination of two types of shrimp with soy and a dollop of wasabi on top. I have honestly never had pawns as fresh as this and it left me salivating for me. One of our friends we dined with loved this dish so much she ordered it again at the end of her meal! I still don't know how something so seemingly simple could have such sweetness and intensity of flavour.
2 types of shrimp - shira ebi and amae ebi |
The next dish was steamed abalone with seaweed. The abalone flesh is tender and tastes like fresh seawater. The seaweed helped to accentuate these flavours even more.
Abalone |
Crab with egg |
Chu-toro sashimi |
For our sashimi course, we got chu toro (medium fatty tuna) and flounder. The two pieces of fish contrasted dramatically in texture, the chu toro soft and melts in your mouth and the flounder subtle in flavour and more chewy (and hence cut to a thinner width). The contrast actually helped to emphasise the special features of the two types of fish.
Sashimi - chu toro and flounder |
To be honest, I was a little surprised when I saw our next dish was grilled fish but I was not disappointed. We were given grilled swordfish and o-toro (the fattiest of fatty tuna). The fish was not overcooked and there was a real intensity of sweetness to the swordfish. As for the o-toro - well, it was o-toro - do I need to say more? It was out of this world and just melted away in our mouths.
Grilled fish - swordfish and o-toro |
Yellow Tail |
Flavour and texture wise, I have never had squid like this. It was a perfect balance of crunch, tenderness and chewiness. I was amazed at how much the lemon and salt helped emphasise the fresh flavours of the squid.
Squid - with lemon and salt |
Horse mackerel |
O-toro perfectly seasoned with just the amount of soy sauce the chef wants you to enjoy the sushi with. Remember not to dunk your sushi into any more soy sauce!! |
And it didn't disappoint. When you eat good uni, it feels like you are tasting the sea in your mouth. It's salty, sweet and creamy all at the same time. The chef also sprinkled a bit of salt on the top to accentuate the flavours. This was just perfect. Even better than the uni we had in Hokkaido!
Bafun uni |
Next we had a kawahagi fish with liver. It's the first time I've had fish with liver in this way and was a little hesitant but it turns out quite enjoyable. The liver was like Foie Gras of the sea and the texture of the fish in contract with the liver also elevated the dish.
Now onto the last few dishes of the omakase. The first being miso soup, followed by grilled shitake mushroom and anago (saltwater eel) nigiri.
Miso Soup |
Shitake mushroom nigiri |
Anago nigiri |
This was the end of our omakase. Our chef then asked us if we were full or wanted any additional items. We agonised momentarily about whether to call it a day or indulge in another piece of that amazing o-toro nigiri again. In the end, we opted to go for our friend's motto (who also decided to have one more of the shrimp two ways that we first ate) - if you like it, you have to eat it twice! And with that, we each ordered ourselves another o-toro (whilst quietly ignoring what the monetary carnage would be at the end).
O-toro - look at that glistening fat |
In comparison to many other top flight sushi restaurants, Sushiko Honten was extremely easy to make a reservation at. We didn't need to jump through elaborate hoops, we were told to book through a hotel because we were foreigners and the person taking our booking spoke some English. And it was the best meal we had in Japan.
Sushiko Honten: +81 3-3571-1968
Address: 6-3-8 Ginza, Chuo, Tokyo 104-0061, Japan