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Seoul, South Korea

스시조 - Sushi Cho

CuisineKorean Sushi
La Liste

Within the Four Seasons Hotel Seoul, Sushi Cho distills the quiet theater of Edomae tradition into an intimate omakase experience for discerning palates. A hushed counter of polished hinoki frames master itamae as they compose pristine, season-led bites—wild bluefin, Hokkaido uni, and delicately aged white fish—each brushed, torched, or folded with purposeful restraint. Exceptional rice, calibrated to the day’s humidity, meets meticulously sourced seafood, while a deep sake and rare whisky collection invites thoughtful pairing. For guests who value precision over spectacle, Sushi Cho delivers measured luxury—pure, resonant flavors, immaculate service, and a lingering sense of privilege.

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스시조 - Sushi Cho restaurant in Seoul, South Korea
About

Tucked within the Four Seasons Hotel Seoul, Sushi Cho is a sanctuary for those who measure indulgence by nuance. The space is tranquil and impeccably poised—soft light on pale wood, the faint perfume of freshly planed hinoki, and the almost ceremonial rhythm of the itamae at work. Here, the experience is not announced; it emerges, quietly, course by course, in the language of season, texture, and restraint.

The omakase begins with a whisper—perhaps translucent hirame lightly matured to coax sweetness, or a jewel of Hokkaido uni that lingers with oceanic cream. Rice is its own craft: temperature precisely tempered, grains yielding with integrity, seasoned to harmonize rather than dominate. Each piece is assembled with unhurried confidence: a brush of nikiri, a deliberate tuck of nori, a fleeting kiss of binchotan that deepens aroma without marring purity. The result is sushi that speaks softly but persists, leaving a clear impression of provenance and intention.

Beyond the counter, the chef’s kaiseki-inspired interludes reveal refined contrasts—crystalline sashimi, a silken chawanmushi layered with umami, or a pristine broiled fish whose fat renders to a lacquered sheen. The cellar enhances the narrative: rare junmai daiginjo, seasonal namazake, and an insightful selection of Japanese whisky are paired with discretion, each pour accentuating the subtle architecture of flavor. Service is watchful and fluent, calibrated to anticipate rather than interrupt.

Sushi Cho’s exclusivity is felt not in spectacle, but in its immaculate restraint and devotion to craft. It is a place where the tempo of the meal seems to synchronize with the city outside, slowing just enough to savor an elusive sweetness in winter tuna or the first snap of spring shellfish. For the well-traveled gourmand, it offers a distinctly Seoul expression of Edomae tradition—elegant, discreet, and unforgettable in its quiet confidence.