HIYAMA Sukiyaki

If you feel like dining on sukiyaki the traditional way and can stand sitting crossed leg on the floor for an hour or so, then Hiyama in Nihonbashi would be the perfect restaurant for you. I personally like the Nihonbashi area where you can still find many old traditional restaurants. Designed like an old tea house with many rooms of various sizes (most of them tatami ), Hiyama is one of those quaint, vintage Japanese restaurant with a Michelin star discreetly hidden under it’s sleeves.

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I asked the lovely lady in a kimono who helped cook our sukiyaki dish about this Michelin star and she said she had no idea how, when and by whom her restaurant was rated. She did not mind the acknowledgement but explained that many Japanese restaurants didn’t really care that much about the little French star.

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There are a variety of lunch menus at Hiyama with prices based on the quality of meat. Prices vary from about 7000 to 10.000 yen for about 200 grams of meat.

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The meat and vegetables are cooked for you and then dipped into a bowl of raw egg. The taste of the raw egg mixed with the sweetness of the sukiyaki sauce is simply divine.

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To end things, a very simple yet lovely dessert, a single deliciously sweet strawberry.

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To summon things up, I think that price, taste and meat quality wise, Hiyama actually matches my other favorite sukiyaki restaurant in town, Imafuku. I wrote about their shabu-shabu before but just realized I haven’t written about their sukiyaki which is excellent. It just depends on what kind of experience you are looking for. Imafuku is more modern, Hiyama more traditional. Both are excellent.

Price : $$$

HIYAMA. 2-5-1 Nihonbashiningyocho, Chu0-ku, Tokyo. Phone : 03-3666-2901

IMAHAN

This would be the restaurant to go to if you are looking for some excellent sukiyaki. Established well over a hundred years ago in 1895, Imahan has about 10 restaurants serving sukiyaki, shabu-shabu and steak courses specializing in Imahan beef.

Imahan Ginza facade

I have personally tried two of their branches in Yurakucho and Ginza. The one in Ginza is on the 5th floor of the Barneys New York building and a little more luxurious. Although they have shabu-shabu and steak courses which are all good, their sukiyaki is the best. Their way of eating sukiyaki here is different from what I am used to back home in Indonesia, where we have plenty of Japanese restaurants. Sukiyaki back home comes in a hot-pot with all the meat and vegetables swimming inside the sauce and a raw egg on the side. I would throw the raw egg into my sauce until it was half done and then eat it. I had no idea we were supposed to dip the meat and vegetables in the raw egg before eating it. They taught me how to eat it the Japanese way here in Imahan, and it was absolutely delicious.

The Imahan wagyu

Dipping the beef in a bowl of raw egg

The staff at Imahan usually asks foreigners if you mind eating raw eggs. My suggestion is to go for it. It really is delicious.

When you are not in the mood for some sukiyaki then I would go for the steak course which comes in a box and it is really juicy and flavorful.

The steak course

For desert there is an option of fruits like the famous Japanese melon or some ice cream.

IMAHAN GINZA

Kojun Building 5F, 6-8-7 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo
TEL: 81-3-3571-5333
Hours 11:30am to 10:00pm

Website : http://www.imahan.com/e-guide