The 7 Immutable Laws Of Identifying A “Real” Japanese Restaurant

I know this week was supposed to be week 4 of the Shojin Ryori Series, but I need at least another week to cook more things to come up with a good meal combination for you guys. So, instead of that, I wanted to go over something similar… figuring out how to know if a Japanese restaurant is any good.

The thing is, most non-Japanese people don’t know good Japanese restaurants from bad ones. It’s not your fault, though. You grew up eating that Costco Maruchan ramen when you weren’t going to Happy Teriyaki (pro tip: they are not happy). I imagine it’s a lot like when I try to find a “good” Indian restaurant. I honestly have no idea what’s “good,” though for some reason I think I do (I don’t). If I took Ghandi to one of the Indian restaurants I frequent I’m sure he’d slap me in the face.

So, as someone who’s ridden the ol’ Japanese restaurant donkey cart a few times, I’m here to educate you. No longer do you need to go to sub-par Japanese (I should say “Japanese” restaurants just because you don’t know any better. I hope none of these methods “washoku” you, though. Har har har…

Law #1: Be Super Racist With Yelp Reviewers

Law #1? Don’t trust non-Japanese people on Yelp (sometimes you can trust other Asians, but they have to have a good track record). Okay, I know this is super racist (as in, if Superman had the power of racism, it would be at this level), but I hold myself to this very racist standard for all things on Yelp. If I want to find some good Chicago pizza, I try to find reviewers from Chicago. If I want to find good  Chinese food, I try to find Chinese reviewers (who say things like “this is just like what my mom would make me as a kid!!! ermagahd!!”).

Unfortunately, I had to learn my lesson the hard way. Coming to Portland, where everyone is white and can’t tell the difference between chuutoro and ootoro (I know, barbaric, right??), I was excited to see so many highly rated Japanese / sushi restaurants in the area. Then, I went to one. “Eugh, terrible!” I’d say. “Probably a fluke. Let’s try another… wth is wrong with you people??”

Then I learned… Some reviews are much better than others. Things to look out for in order of preference:

  1. Japanese people. Obviously they know what they’re talking about.
  2. People with Japanese names. Chances are they grew up with at least some real Japanese food.
  3. People who mention that they lived / worked in Japan (not always good, but a good indication because they’ve had lots of “real” Japanese food).
  4. People who don’t mention “pot stickers” in their review (last resort).

On top of this, you’ll want to look out for certain keywords in the reviews. If a lot of the reviews mention the miso soup, the pot stickers, or the bentos, there’s a good chance that this Japanese restaurant are not the droids you’re looking for. I don’t know what is up with Americans and their miso soup, though. The funny thing is, it gets way better than whatever gets served in America.

As one Yelp Reviewer said: “This miso soup is off the hook!”

Is it really, though? Is it? Yelp needs to add a “sort by racism” option.

Law #2: Avoid Anyplace With The Word “Teriyaki” In The Name

I feel like this goes without saying, but any restaurant with the name “Teriyaki” in it is almost certainly a no-go. Hey, teriyaki is tasty, but it’s almost always incredibly Americanized.

While you should avoid places that have the word “Teriyaki” in their name, it’s probably worth noting that there are good Japanese restaurants that serve teriyaki as a part of their menu. Note that this is probably because most Americans don’t actually like “real” Japanese food, so they have to serve salty meat behemoths. That being said, places that serve absolutely no teriyaki (chicken or beef, especially) at all get extra points and are more likely to be “good.”

Law #3: No Refunds. No Exchanges. No Fun.

Look around you. Do you see signs that say “No refunds,” “No exchanges,” “No …. etc”? If you do, you’re in luck! You may be inside of a “good” Japanese restaurant. Although not all good Japanese restaurants have these kinds of signs, only good ones do. I have no idea why this is, but I have a theory:

  1. Japanese person comes to America thinking “hey, I’m going to start an awesome Japanese restaurant.”
  2. Japanese person starts said Japanese restaurant. Americans can’t appreciate it because they aren’t used to this kind of “real” Japanese food. Ask for refunds and exchanges.
  3. Because Japanese people aren’t used to refunds or exchanges, especially with food, Japanese restaurant owner is shocked!
  4. Japanese restaurant owner slowly becomes more and more hard on the inside. He becomes bitter and cold. He puts up signs.

That’s only one theory though! One thing you can be certain of, though: If you enjoy good Japanese food, there will never be a reason to return any of the food you get at a sign-infested Japanese restaurant. It’s going to be excellent food. Give the owner a thumbs up. He probably needs it.

Law #4: Restaurant Should Have A Japanese Chef, Japanese Owner

sushi chef

Photo by Kojach

Whoa Koichi! Don’t go all KKK Nazi on us, now.

Sorry sorry! Hear me out, my dear Grand Dragon Of The Realm!

First off, I’ll say that there are exceptions to this rule. That being said, I’d rather go to a Thai place run by Thai people or a McDonalds run by an American. In general, this is just a better experience. When a Thai person makes Thai food, chances are they’ve been making it their whole life. When someone else makes Thai food, it’s probably something they learned recently (in the last few years). I’m not saying non-Thai people can’t make good Thai food. I am saying that Thai people, in general, make better Thai food. Same goes with Japanese, possibly more so.

Here’s the deal: Japanese food restaurants have nice profit margins. People pay top dollar for sushi, and it definitely doesn’t cost them $6 for two slices of tuna. Because of this, there are many other people who want to jump in on this business to make some mad sushi-bank. This is probably why there are so many “Japanese” restaurants run by Koreans and Chinese. There’s a lot of “exploitation” in this way.

Of course, these people are mainly in it for the profits. I find it hard to believe that they’re in it for their passion of Japanese food. They’re in it for the profits that Japanese food holds, which means the quality suffers as well (people who want more profits cut more corners). So, in general, Japanese restaurants run by non-Japanese people aren’t as good. The experience isn’t there and the passion isn’t there. There’s a reason why Korean kimchi tastes way better than Japanese kimchi.

But how can you tell the difference between a Korean owner and a Japanese owner? Well, sometimes you can’t. Usually there’s a few hints in the menu, though:

  1. Do they serve any non-Japanese food that’s Korean or Chinese? If so, the restaurant is probably not run by Japanese people.
  2. Are there takeout menus? If so, there’s a decent chance that this isn’t a restaurant run by a Japanese person.
  3. Do the menus have numbers next to each item? This is generally a Chinese restaurant thing.

But like I said, sometimes there are great Japanese restaurants run by non-Japanese people. In general, though, non-Japanese people running Japanese restaurants are in it for the money, not for the passion. You’ll be able to taste the difference in the food.

Law #5: Should Not Serve Orange Chicken Or Hamburgers

Photo by pointnshoot

As mentioned in Law #4, there shouldn’t be non-Japanese food on the menu (maybe something for the kids… maybe). Whether it’s because it tells you that non-Japanese people are running the restaurant or that they don’t have focus, in general this is never a good thing. Have you ever been to a restaurant that was great that served two or three completely different categories of food? Probably not. There are a lot of “Japanese” restaurants that serve non-Japanese food out there as well. In general, they’re not great. Exception? Hawaii. Hawaii can get away with anything in regards to food.

Law #6: Should Not Be Named After Mt. Fuji

Photo by アリセ

There’s one thing that connects all mediocre Japanese restaurants, and that is the name. Usually, good Japanese restaurants have unique names. Perhaps it’s the owner’s name, perhaps it’s something else. What I can tell you is that the name probably does not contain any of these words.

  • Fuji / Mt. Fuji
  • Bento
  • -Zilla
  • Tokyo
  • Sushi
  • Samurai
  • Wasabi
  • Ninja
  • Teriyaki
  • Sakura
  • Any combination of Beni or Hana.

Oh, and it gets worse when you combine any of these. “Samurai Wasabi,” “Fuji Bento,” “Tokyo Sushi,” “Ninja Teriyaki,” and so on. These sound concernedly real to me.

Think about it. What do non-Japanese people know about Japan? Okay, there’s Mt. Fuji (Google shows nearly 15 million results for “Fuji Restaurant”). Then there’s Tokyo… everyone knows about Tokyo. After that there’s Godzilla, Samurai, Ninja, Teriyaki, and sushi. In terms of “what Japan is to regular Americans” this is about it. There’s two problems with restaurants having names that include these words:

  1. It may have been named by someone who knows nothing about Japan (and probably nothing about Japanese food, see Law #4), which is why they chose some generic Japan-related name. Not any different from naming a Chinese restaurant after pandas and bamboo.
  2. Someone is making this restaurant for Americans, which means it isn’t Japanese food anymore.

Let me know in the comments. How many of you have Japanese restaurants that include one of these words? I’d bet at least 100% of you?

Law #7: Sushi Rolls Should Not Take Up Twelve Menu Pages

Photo by ayesamson

And the last law: sushi! With the soaring popularity of sushi in America, you can’t skip this. Sushi gives you a ton of clues as to whether or not a Japanese restaurant is “good” or not.

One Page Maximum, Please: If the menu contains more than one page of sushi rolls you’re in trouble. First of all, sushi rolls are much more of a thing in America than they are in Japan. Americans go apeshit over sushi rolls, for who knows what reason. I guess they contain less raw ingredients and you can deep fry them? I have no idea. Thing is, there are way too many of them. I consistently run into sushi menus that contain literally six or more pages worth of sushi rolls, and every one of them is just a slight variation on the last. Most likely, this restaurant is run by someone who is not Japanese. There’s lots of money in sushi rolls, so this person thinks that the more they have, the more money they’ll make. Obviously they aren’t in it for the passion of making great Japanese food.

Too Much Rice: It’s hard to gage this if you’re not used to less rice, but in general, “bad” sushi contains more rice and “good” sushi contains less. This is a trick that most Japanese restaurants do to make things bigger and fill you up faster (without having to give up as much profit-cutting fish!). Almost every sushi restaurant in America uses too much rice, I can tell you now. When you find someplace that does less (and higher quality) rice and achieves a better balance, you know you’ve found a gem.

Sushi Chef Shouldn’t Talk To You Much: Well, unless he knows you pretty well. In general, Japanese sushi chefs tend to talk to people they don’t know a lot less (exceptions to this rule abound, I’m sure). Non-Japanese sushi chefs are more talkative. Perhaps this is due to focus. Perhaps this is due to culture. I’m not totally sure, but it is something I’ve noticed. They’re too immersed in making great sushi to talk to you about your marathon or whatever it is you’re blabbing on about.

The Air Should Smell “Fresh”: If you smell the air and it smells fishy… well… something isn’t right. Sushi shouldn’t be “fishy,” and it certainly shouldn’t make the whole place smell fishy. This probably means the fish isn’t as fresh as it could be. Smell the air and turn around if it’s not ideal.

Seasonal: There are a lot of items that should be served seasonally. While I won’t go into what’s served when, in general your chef shouldn’t give you anything seasonal that’s not available fresh during that particular season. One way to figure this out is to ask the chef what is offered seasonally right now or look for a “specials” board. This will take more experience to figure out, but this little hint will tell you about how important freshness is to them.

Sushi Shouldn’t Require Wasabi, Shoyu (Soy Sauce): This is how you know you’ve found the motherload. Almost no Japanese restaurant does this in America. Even Japanese places don’t do this. But, if you go someplace that applies both wasabi and sauce for you (because they know what’s perfect for that particular piece of sushi), you can pinch yourself and see if you’re dreaming. Most likely, you’ll wake up a moment later, hungry and covered in sweat. If you don’t, though, smile and know that you might be at Jiro’s.

That’s Just Like Your Opinion, Man…

Wow, what a load of racism this post was! Sorry about that. Just want to mention again that there are exceptions to all of these “laws” (okay, so maybe they aren’t “laws,” but it sounds cooler). These laws will only get you so far, though. You have to go out there and try real Japanese food if you want to learn to appreciate real Japanese food. The more you try (and cook!) the better your palate will become. Of course, same goes for all types of food, including Korean, Chinese, Thai, American, French, and so-on. When it comes to food, the mother-country almost always knows best. If you want Japanese food you should get it from a “real” Japanese restaurant.

Also, food changes as it gets touched by other cultures. This isn’t a bad thing, and “real” Japanese food as it is now is definitely just a series of changes and adjustments that would probably be an abomination if eaten 500 years ago. “Real” Japanese food doesn’t exist because it’s all real. Same goes for “real” anything. Real is what you make it.

That being said, let’s all get high and mighty about “real” Japanese food for a moment anyways. Tell me about your “real” or “not real” Japanese food experiences in the comments! How many restaurants with the name “Fuji” are in your city or town? How many pages of sushi-roll menu do you read before flipping your table?

(ノಠ益ಠ)ノ彡┻━┻

Hope you enjoyed this post and are now ready to go out and find some “real” Japanese food. Sadly, there’s a chance you won’t find any at all, but it never hurts to try. Worst case scenario? Just go to Japan.

[hr]

Source: Header Image (note that I’m not saying this is a bad place to eat, it’s just my header picture because it has the word Teriyaki in it).

  • orangedude

    I loved this article! I laughed and learned a few things! I love our towns local “Little Tokyo” restaurant. Not because I think it’s “Japanese food”, but because it’s good food! I wouldn’t ever go there for authentic Japanese food, but I would go there for some good chicken+rice dishes!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Murata has a pretty reasonable lunch special, I think

  • http://www.sputniksweetie.com SputnikSweetie

    Hmm, if you’re looking for $ sushi… maybe Sansai? Carts like Sushi PDX or Zenbu might be worth a shot, too. Oh, and for just general Japanese, Biwa has a happy hour and Kale is pretty affordable anytime.

  • shiroi

    Unfortunately you will probably never be able to easily procure “real” Japanese food outside of Japan, even if you go to an allegedly “good” Japanese restaurant (by whatever standards you judge it to be good, racist or not). The reasons for this are the exact same reasons why you usually can’t get good American or Mexican food in Japan: (a) The cost of truly authentic ingredients is too high, and (b) Americans in general don’t actually like Japanese food (just like Japanese in general don’t actually like American/Mexican food), so a smart restauranteur must cater to the local tastes at least a little in order to stay in business.

    Hence sweet tacos in Japan (Japanese don’t like meat that tastes like meat), and super salty teriyaki in America (Americans don’t like meat that tastes like sugar). Generally speaking, of course.

    And totally removed from the article itself, I just hate to see Americans on here trashing other Americans for not “understanding” ethnic foods or whatever, American-Japanese food is garbage blah blah blah. Look guys, we all have certain tastes that developed thanks to the culture we grew up in. It’s nothing to be ashamed of or to get all snooty about! It’s not like the Japanese are any better about it, believe me. You should see the way some of my students screw up their faces at bread. Bread!!

  • http://www.sputniksweetie.com SputnikSweetie

    I’m just curious—where in America are you from/have you lived?

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    I think you’re right – it’s hard to say what’s “good” or “authentic” – what’s good for one person is no good for another, and what’s “real” changes when it moves through time and various cultures.

    Gotta understand that this article 3/4 entertainment (I think the language of this article makes that fairly obvious, but just in case…), didn’t actually mean to get snooty, sorry!

  • Jewbacabra

    feel like I should give a heads up to those in the San Francisco area that the sushi restaurant Kiji is the best sushi I’ve had outside of Japan. Definitely recommend it.

  • Reptic

    Alligator sushi in Georgia?… Nah, that sounds more like a Louisiana/Florida thing.

  • http://twitter.com/empireofderp Nej

    Mount. Fuji in Birmingham, UK is delicious. It’s run by Japanese staff and chefs. But I’m white so don’t take my word for it.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000185670208 Nick Haupt

    What about semi-franchises? In Florida (and maybe other places idk) we have a restaurant called Kobe, and I think more than one Kobe Ichi-ban, and it seems to follow all of your rules to a tee. But since there’s like 5 of them spread out over multiple cities, I’m starting to second guess it.

  • beattiend

    Have you tried Biwa? It’s the only one I’ve found so far that is any good, and follows these rules :)

  • beattiend

    I like biwa

  • lychalis

    There’s a lot of Japanese-style restaurants on the road where my bf’s dorm is – w’ve decided to try them all. There’s one called The Japanese Canteen – I had the bento and to be honest it wasn’t great :/ bit bland – didn’t see any japanese guys working there either.

  • http://twitter.com/shollum Shollum

    No, the use of the word ‘racism’ is precautionary, from what I can tell. On the internet (or any form of media for that matter), saying anything that isn’t one-hundred percent politically correct will land you a s**t-storm of “You racist bastard!!!11!!!1″ remarks.
    Also, Tofugu articles are written with entertainment value in mind. For some reason, a lot of us will probably find the use of the word ‘racist’ to describe actions as entertaining. Since Western culture (especially the US, though we’re all hypocrites if you ask me) is constantly trying to restate the variable ‘Racism=False’, it becomes a ‘thing you shouldn’t touch’. We all know how much people like to talk about the taboo and even be or do the taboo just because of it’s taboo status (and yet they fuss at kids for doing precisely what they were told NOT to do).

    Thus, the (rather incorrect) use of the word ‘racism’ to describe how to pick out better reviews. Have fun being a critic about lighthearted internet articles. You know you do it for the same reason people like to talk about the taboo.

  • Anna Li

    Thank you!!! I know how to identify Chinese restaurants ‘cuz I grew up with it (I can make awesome dumplings/bao zi! I can make…etc.) Now I know how to pursue restaurant perfection in Japanese food!

  • Meta

    There’s certainly no technological or logistical reasons for the authentic ingredients to be prohibitively expensive and economically unviable for authentic Japanese food to be made in US in today’s age. In areas with high Japanese population (California for example), Japanese imports and authentic Japanese food are quite readily available, because the demand is high and there’s money to be made.

    Take sushi for instance, you can buy imported Japanese rice at Japanese supermarkets in LA even as regular consumers. And as far as the fish, they are not “grown” in Japan, they are caught all over the world. Some of the best tunas are caught in oceans near US right now, then flash-frozen and shipped to Japanese auction houses the next day.

    The reasons why some goods from one country is difficult to get in another is mostly artificial and political. For example, Japan put a heavy tariff on rice from US to protect local rice industry, while US has a ban on Kobe beef because USDA restrictions.

  • ジョサイア

    Oh so funny xD

  • grotesk_faery

    There are only two sushi restaurants in my city where I’ll go, and I think they follow most of those rules. They don’t have the “no exchanges” sign, and there are a lot of rolls, but there’s also a lot of sushi and sashimi, as well as udon, donburi, etc. One has sushi in the name, but it’s really good regardless, and the name is WAY tame compared to some of the “sushi” restaurants we’ve had. Their ingredients are really fresh for a sushi restaurant in America, and their chefs are all Japanese, though most of the wait staff are SE Asian in one and American in the other, which probably has a lot to do with the fact that they cost less. I don’t really care who brings it to the table, though, so long as a Japanese person is making the food. I think you’d be hard pressed to find a Japanese restaurant in America that followed all these criteria that wasn’t crazy expensive, and honestly, unless it was in a large city, I think they’d go under pretty quickly. It’s just too expensive to get a lot of fresh, seasonal Japanese ingredients, and most people wouldn’t appreciate them enough to pay the price for them since they don’t see them often enough to develop a taste for them. My city is roughly half university, which is in turn at least half hipsters, so they think they know and like sushi, and I honestly can’t fault the restaurants for catering to them a bit. But while they do have some terrible abomination rolls, they also have really great, authentic sushi. So as long as you don’t buy something that doesn’t look traditional, I think you’d have a great experience.

  • ジョサイア

    …I just burst out laughing.
    Have you ever eaten at china house?
    If not (ノಠ益ಠ)ノ彡┻━┻

  • http://www.facebook.com/devanylisteraley Devany Lister Aley

    My boyfriend always jokes that I’ve taken him to an authentic (as you can get in California) Japanese restaurant only when we stick out like sore thumbs, there’s little to no English translations on the menus, and tiny obaa-chans want to touch my blonde hair.

    Another tip I’d add is Japanese market food courts. Mitsuwa market has weekends where they have food imported from Japan localities like Okinawa, and they have great ramen, donburi and kastu kare raisu with nary a “super duper mayo and sriracha deep fried fake crab sushi roll special” in sight.

  • ジョサイア

    You do know that Walmart sells everything from 冷凍寿司 to ラーメン right?

  • 古戸ヱリカ

    FYI, your use of only one equal sign to imply equality is racist to programmers.

  • http://www.facebook.com/tanner.m.colvin Tanner M Colvin

    Thankfully none of the sushi joints in my little Montana town have “Fuji” in the name. At least not yet. There’s a new sushi joint popping up in my town every couple of years. We do have several restaurants with sushi though. A little place called Dave’s Sushi is the most popular in town, but it smells like BO from all the college kids. We had a pricy sushi restaurant close down called “Looie’s” which was actually owned by an Italian guy. Fresh ingredients, but expensive.

    The best sushi place in town for me is “Watanabe.” A little restaurant owned by a family from Kumamoto, where I studied abroad. They do break #7 by having abundant “inside-out” rolls on their menu. But at the same time they have a pretty succulent selection of nigiri. No ootoro sadly. It’s as authentic as Japanese food gets in Montana, despite the lack of a no refund sign. Oh, and no hamburgers either! I also can’t forget the fish monger downtown who has fresh tuna rolls for sale along with imported goods like furikake and Kewpie mayonnaise.

  • belgand

    In the SF area Tani’s Kitchen in Daly City is rather good. It’s a small (about 12 seats total), family-run business that does a good job with homestyle cooking. Yeah, they try to do too much and push into areas they don’t really excel at (i.e. sushi), but the curry and donburi are definitely worth a trip down there.

    Murracci’s in the Financial District does curry. That’s it. I mean, I think they serve a few other things, but outside of appetizers or such it’s just curry on the menu. The only problem is that they’re only open for lunch on weekdays because they target the work lunch crowd… which also means they tend to be busy.

    Okina Sushi in the Inner Richmond is another really great spot. In this case it’s run by an allegedly Japanese trained sushi chef who, as rumor has it, operates the restaurant as a sort of hobby. It’s only open Thurs-Sat for dinner and only takes cash. Again, it’s a small spot with maybe 20 seats total, if that. It’s also run entirely by the chef/owner and a waitress. Very limited menu consisting mainly of nigiri and a few very traditional rolls with no cooked food.

    This isn’t exhaustive and there are plenty of other good, authentic Japanese restaurants around town.The smartest move you can make here though is that unless you know what you’re doing (e.g the ridiculously expensive and apparently amazing koryori place Kappa) stay away from Japan Town for food. It tends to be one of the worst places to get good Japanese food in town.

  • Lionrence

    these laws are all pretty good, as Japanese food enthusiast, I actively try to eat at every Japanese place in my city, Montreal (there’s a lot of them), I can say I came up with similar laws over the years

  • Gabrielle

    Where do you get your fix in Portland? I go to Saburo’s when I’m really craving and want something reasonably priced. Although it does have a special place in my heart, everything is freakin’ gigantic and they do push the rolls quite a bit. Some good noodles would be cool.

  • http://twitter.com/shollum Shollum

    No, ’cause the variable is being set. I mostly work with Python for fun and to set a variable, you simply type ‘variable’ = ‘value’, where ‘variable’ is the variable being set and ‘value’ is any numerical, Boolean, or string value.

    Now, when you are doing something like displaying some text based on if the statement is true or false, then you’d do something like this:
    if Racism == False:
    print(“The US is full of hypocrites!”)
    elif Racism == True:
    print(“Well, you’re quite honest about being in the KKK aren’t you? Now, STFU and die! … or something.”)

    (EDIT: aww… it left out the indentation. Python runs on indentations!)
    (by the way, if you were to give a value to Racism of either True or False, you could run this program and it would say something (if it were anything else, it’d give a syntax error since it doesn’t have any way to handle a different value). That’s why Python is so loved, even if it’s a high-level language with all the limitations of one)

    Basically, ‘=’ is ‘equals’ and ‘==’ is ‘equivalent’. Even if they basically mean the same thing, in Python (and other programming languages, if I remember correctly) it’s completely different.

    Yes, I spent way to much time replying to this… But I have to assert my correctness on the internet!

  • http://www.facebook.com/ronnie.meade.5 Ronnie Meade

    I have a restaurant in az called sakana and it’s great, one page of rolls it used to have two Japanese sushi chefs but one quit for school I think. When you walk in you see the specials for the time of day and the menu is quite small. One very beautiful Japanese lady that I think is the owners wife and all the waitresses are American lol.

  • http://gakuranman.com Gakuranman

    Funnily enough the best McDonalds I ever had was in Japan… Just sayin’ ;).

    Spot on with the sashimi vs rice quantities though. A good test is to see if the fish touches the plate. If you can barely see the rice under it, you’re probably in for a treat!

  • DAVIDPD

    Here in Sacramento, CA, there are only a small handful of REAL Japanese restaurants. Most of them are owned by enterprising Koreans or Chinese. Of the real deal Japanese restaurants, of which is owned and operated by a Japanese couple, Yui Marlu is my personal favorite. Can’t get much better in Sacramento. Too bad there is no place to get real deal Japanese street food,

  • DAVIDPD

    “Japanese food” can be delicious although not authentic. If it tastes good to you that is all that really matters.

  • DAVIDPD

    Most countries’ street food or common man’s food, can be had in other countries, especially in the USA, but the irony is that it can only be had at exceptionally expensive restaurants. Take Pad Thai, Ramen, or real deal Dim Sum, all can be had in their authentic preparation and taste, but just cost three to four times as expensive as they should be.

  • Ron

    I’m in a college town right now, so it’s just sushi bars D:

  • Yas

    If you’re ever in Chicago, check out a place called Itto Sushi (though don’t trust google maps because they think it’s someplace it’s totally not). I used to go there all the time when I lived in the neighborhood, and oh how I miss it. The staff is all Japanese, there’s more kitchen food on the menu than there is sushi, and every time I’ve been there there have been as many Japanese patrons as non-Japanese, even in the overwhelmingly white yuppie neighborhood in which it’s located. They also have a 日本語 menu with different stuff on it, but since I began studying Japanese long after I moved to a different part of the city I’ve never taken a peek.

    There’s also a place called Sunshine Cafe which doesn’t serve sushi at all, and which has been recommended to me by multiple people including some who spent time in JET. I can’t say for sure how good it is myself because the one time I tried to go they decided to ignore their posted hours and not be open.

  • piderman

    I’ve been to two Japanese restaurants in the Netherlands so far… one was called “Sakura” but looking at their website they have numbers on the menu and things like “French Duck Breast… in Teriyaki Sauce!” so that one is clear. The other one is called “Konnichi Wa” which I feel violates rule #6 a bit but otherwise they seem to be ok :)

  • Mescale

    Some other rules:

    1. Are Japanese people eating there?
    2. Is the place kinda shabby but full of people anyway. See 1 for types of people.
    3. Ethnic stronghold locations are better

    I also tend to rate Japanese restaurants by their sashimi, bad places you have sashimi that looks like sashimi and has a texture which is sashimi like, but no flavour at all. So all I need to do is eat a restaurants Sashimi to tell if it’s any good, of course its got an element of russian roulette involved, but hey, its like french restaurants and steak tartar.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    This response is the greatest thing I’ve read all day

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Another good taste test is the tamago nigiri… gotta taste a ton of it to develop that fancy palate, but this is the thing that takes the most skill out of anything, strangely, so a lot of people taste it to see if the sushi restaurant is going to be any good or not. Plus, it’s cheap!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    lol, “Sakura” is another I should add to the list of banned-words, haha.

    There’s one teriyaki place in the mall around here called “Sarku.” I’m pretty sure someone messed up and meant to name it “sakura”, but there’s no way to be sure… I’m pretty sure.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Not showing up on maps sounds like a good sign, haha. We have a place similar to that that’s really good here. It has no sign, so people have trouble finding it, but it’s awesome!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    See, I hear a lot of people like Saburo’s, but I can’t get my head around the giant portions (or mouth, for that matter?). I haven’t been there so I can’t say, and I probably should go, but if I’m down that way, I go to Jade, because Jade Teahouse = best restaurant in Portland, haha.

    Otherwise, Murata’s and Yuzu are both good. Also, Kalé has pretty good Japanese curry.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    WUT? 冷凍寿司 sounds like something that shouldn’t be allowed to exist :/

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Oh! Please tell me how to identify good Chinese restaurants. I _think_ I have an idea, but I almost certainly am completely wrong.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Canteen!? For some reason I got the image of the Cantina from Star Wars in my head just now…

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    I would probably say that franchises in America for Japanese food aren’t going to be great… but I have no idea since I haven’t been to any of those. Hell, I guess if Denny’s can serve authentic Japanese food in Japan, anything’s possible.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    dang, I haven’t gone there :( Adding to my SF to-do list

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Non-authentic Japanese food can be tasty too, I agree!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    I’m so glad to see the “den” isn’t like a “hovel” or “cave” or something, and instead is 伝, haha.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    dyamng, that’s really cheap.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    STOP FIGHTING ヾ(;;;;;;;;;;;;´༎ຶ0༎ຶ)ノ