Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Kisser is a Japanese restaurant in Nashville, Tennessee. [1] [2] Established in March 2023, the business was included in The New York Times 's 2023 list of the 50 best restaurants in the United States. [3] Kisser was a semifinalist in the Best New Restaurant category of the James Beard Foundation Awards in 2024. [4]
The idea for the location came from fellow chef and admirer Thomas Keller, who was opening his own restaurant, Per Se, in the complex. [3] Continuing the ideas he developed in Los Angeles, Masa continued to serve only an omakase menu, tracking his customers' meals and reactions, and sourced 90% of his fish from Tokyo's Tsukiji fish market. [3]
The film follows Jiro Ono (小野 二郎, Ono Jirō), a then-85-year-old sushi master and owner of Sukiyabashi Jiro, then a Michelin three-star restaurant. Sukiyabashi Jiro is a 10-seat, sushi-only restaurant located in a Tokyo subway station. As of 2023, Jiro Ono serves a tasting menu of roughly 20 courses, for a minimum of JP¥55,000 (US$270 ...
Layer Cake, a multi-level restaurant and bar near Lower Broadway in Nashville's downtown entertainment district, closed in February after two years in business. Layer Cake, 3rd Avenue South, in ...
Kagurazaka Ishikawa is a Michelin 3-star kaiseki restaurant in Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan. It is owned and operated by chef Hideki Ishikawa. [1] It is a personal favorite of chef David Kinch. [2] [3] [4] The restaurant has four private rooms and can seat seven at the counter. [5]
In February, the Tennessee Department of Health carried out nearly 1,800 inspections of restaurants, food trucks and other food service kitchens in Davidson County. The median score for those ...
You can now get a room at the Nashville International Airport terminal. Hilton BNA Nashville Airport Terminal hotel officially opens its 305 rooms, including seven suites, to guests with a ribbon ...
Kaiseki is often very expensive – kaiseki dinners at top traditional restaurants generally cost from 5,000 yen to upwards of 40,000 per person, [13] without drinks. Cheaper options are available, notably lunch (from around 4,000 to 8,000 yen (US$37 to $74), and in some circumstances bento (around 2,000 to 4,000 yen (US$18 to $37)).