Teppanyaki grasp Junichi Yoshida of Michelin-starred Ishigaki Yoshida ‘burns in’ the hotplate at Koki for its grand opening
I needed to search on-line to search out out the place Ishigaki was earlier than I dined with the person who put the small Japanese island on the culinary map.
To my shock, I found it’s lower than 200 miles east of Taiwan’s capital, Taipei. Meanwhile, Japan’s capital metropolis, Tokyo, is a few 1,200 miles away.
Ishigaki is the second largest island and the industrial hub of the small Yaeyama group of islands some 250 miles southwest of Okinawa. It’s about as far south in Japan because it will get, on the fringes of the North Pacific Ocean.
Photos on Okinawa’s official journey web site present the island ringed by beautiful turquoise coral quays that bug-eyed vacationers can view in glass-bottomed boats. This isn’t precisely ranch nation. It’s nowhere you’d count on reef and beef.
As it seems, it’s dwelling to one of many world’s best cuts of meat that comes from what I now assume have to be a number of the world’s happiest cattle.
“Mr Kitauchi himself, the owner of the farm, feeds the cows by hand,” chef Junichi Yoshida tells me through an interpreter the day earlier than the grand opening of Koki, Capella Hanoi’s beautiful new Japanese eating expertise. “There are just 30 head of cattle on the farm at any given time, so they don’t get stressed during the three years they’re raised.”
Chef Yoshida is aware of his beef.
He’s the teppanyaki grasp who steered his Tokyo restaurant, Ishigaki Yoshida, to its first Michelin Star again in 2015. The accolade was additionally the primary ever given to a teppanyaki restaurant.
As a end result, the chef, together with his cherubic face and beaming smile, taught us that going out for teppanyaki needn’t be diminished to a sideshow of spinning eggs and slinging dishes, that it could actually truly be a fantastic eating expertise that leaves your shirt as clear and freshly-pressed once you depart because it was once you walked in.
“The first thing is the family tree of the cattle,” explains the Tokyo native once I ask what makes Ishigaki beef so good. “It determines 80 percent of the flavor of the beef, including the juiciness.”
Indeed, Mr Kitauchi’s web site impressively claims his ranch’s premium steak hails from the Tajima line identified for its “genes for deliciousness.”
I take his phrase for it.
When the next night arrives, I get to expertise simply how deliciously these genes have delivered.
I’m seated in certainly one of 4 personal teppanyaki rooms at Koki that seat simply eight friends when chef Yoshida gently locations two heavily-marbled slabs of meat, every nearly the scale of a home brick, on the shiny heat teppan earlier than me and publicizes: “Tonight, special beef from Okinawa Prefecture!”
After which his spouse and maître d’ produces a doc with a “nose print” and proclaims: “This is the beef certificate showing the beef’s family tree!”
It’s bona fide.
For shut to 2 torturous hours, the blocks of beef (flown in straight from Ishigaki and accessible nowhere else in Vietnam) slowly cook dinner in entrance of us beneath the watchful eye of chef Yoshida.
Whenever he leaves his station to supervise his employees or put together one other dish, I ponder breaking each cultural and culinary rule within the guide by reaching out and prodding them with my chopsticks, they’re that tantalizingly shut.
But happily I get distracted by the dishes and the sake (Koki has essentially the most intensive choice of sake in Vietnam) that comes earlier than I get to style Yoshida san’s teppanyaki.
There are at the least 5 of them.
Firstly, our mouths are gently prepped with a beef consomme jelly with grilled eggplant, salmon roe and an okaki rice cracker, adopted by a crispy Hokkaido crab roll that brings a hush over the room, creating an ambiance a world away from the chaotic streets of the Old Quarter above us.
We may very well be in a kind of subterranean eating places at a subway station within the centre of Tokyo for all I do know. This place is lit.
The sea urchin (additionally flown in straight from Hokkaido twice per week with the crab) is wealthy and creamy due to the scrambled egg and beluga caviar.
There’s additionally a slow-cooked black Japanese abalone marinated for 72 hours in sake intently adopted by a small serving of Juwari soba with abalone liver sauce.
But actually, as scrumptious as they’re, they’re the undercard this night.
As anticipated, it’s the meat that’s the knockout. It’s completely cooked, crimson inside, evenly crisped on the skin and all however dissolves in my mouth with its tenderness and juiciness.
My tooth are superfluous for this expertise.
It’s additionally the primary time I’ve eaten steak with a touch of wasabi which provides every portion further chew and delivers my nasal cavity the recent rush that comes with consuming this most pungent of horseradishes.
The mixture works.
“Oishii desu ka?” chef Yoshida politely enquires in regards to the deliciousness of his steak.
“Oishii desu yo!” I reply, drawing on my rusty Japanese language expertise from my school days.
The cheerful chef beams again at me in a manner that epitomises the Japanese characters that kind the phrase koki after which this pleasant restaurant is known as – vivid and glossy.
Follow Matt on Instagram at @mattcowansaigon
All pictures supplied by Capella Hanoi
A model of this text first appeared on travelandleisureasia.com
If you see this content material reproduced in any form or kind anyplace apart from on thebureauasia.com (or travelandleisureasia.com), then it has been used with out our permission
Related