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Omakase (Japanese: お任せ, Hepburn: o-makase) is a Japanese phrase, used when ordering food in restaurants, that means 'I'll leave it up to you' (from Japanese 'to entrust' (任せる, makaseru)). [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
What to order at a sushi restaurant, according to a chef and restaurant owner.
Omakase is a Japanese restaurant in the South of Market neighborhood in San Francisco, California. The 14-seat restaurant, owned by Kash Feng and chef Jackson Yu, has earned a Michelin star. Description
Omakase means "I leave it up to you." It is a multi-course experience where the chef presents small portions and explains each as you go. Omakase, a Japanese tasting menu, favors the adventurous.
Yoshino is a Japanese restaurant in New York City serving omakase [2] [3] by head chef Tadashi Yoshida. The restaurant connected to The Bowery Hotel earned a Michelin star back in 2022. They also received 4 stars by The New York Times and was rated 9th on their top 100 list in 2024. [citation needed]
Sushi omakase, with its kaleidoscopic cuts of fresh, raw seafood that melt on the tongue, has in recent years experienced a surge in popularity in major U.S. cities.
The offerings are omakase (no menu) only, with chef-selected meals costing $750 per person, not including tax or drinks, though gratuity is included along with a $950 "Hinoki Experience" guaranteeing a counter space as well as a $495 lunch option. [2] [3] [4] The sushi bar itself is a $260,000 piece of rare hinoki wood from Japan.
Sushi chefs have been leading this decades-long conscientious shift from behind their counters — from Hosēki's Morgan Adamson to Sozai's Hajime Sato, ... True to the nature of omakase, the ...