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Modern Japanese Kappo
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Copenhagen, Denmark

Kappo Andō

CuisineJapanese Contemporary
Executive ChefHenrik Ando Levinsen
Price€€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacitySmall
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining
Star Wine List

Kappo Andō brings Japanese kappo technique to Copenhagen's Østerbro district, where chef Henrik Ando Levinsen works across a counter format that prioritises ingredient provenance and seasonal precision. Recognised by Michelin and ranked in the Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe list for consecutive years, it occupies a specific niche within Copenhagen's dining scene: rigorous Japanese craft applied with a Nordic sourcing sensibility.

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Address
Øster Farimagsgade 93, 2100 København, Denmark
Phone
+45 29 82 97 46
Kappo Andō restaurant in Copenhagen, Denmark
About

Where Nordic Sourcing Meets Japanese Discipline

Kappo Andō is a modern Japanese kappo restaurant in Copenhagen, Denmark, led by chef Henrik Ando Levinsen. Venues like Geranium, Noma, and Alchemist occupy the headline tier of that tradition. A quieter thread running through the same city is the kappo format, a Japanese counter style in which the chef cooks in direct view of the guest, and the progression of dishes is shaped around what arrived that morning rather than a fixed printed menu. Kappo Andō, at Øster Farimagsgade 93 in Østerbro, sits at the intersection of these two sensibilities: Japanese technique applied to ingredients sourced with the same seasonal rigour that defines the Nordic school.

The kappo format is distinct from omakase in important ways. Where omakase implies a fixed sequence handed entirely to the chef's discretion, kappo has a more conversational register, a back-and-forth between counter and kitchen that shapes what arrives in front of you. The room at Kappo Andō reflects this. Koan, which fuses New Nordic and kaiseki traditions at the higher €€€€ price point, represents a different approach to the same Franco-Japanese cross-pollination that defines much of Copenhagen's more experimental dining. Kappo Andō operates at the €€€ tier, positioning itself between accessible Japanese dining and the multi-hundred-euro tasting formats that dominate the city's leading tables.

What the Sourcing Tells You

In Japanese cooking, ingredient provenance is not a marketing posture but a technical foundation. Kappo technique demands produce at a specific moment of readiness: the fish that arrived this morning, the vegetable at the precise point before its sugars peak. That philosophy aligns naturally with the Nordic seasonal framework, where the same obsessive attention to arrival dates and micro-seasons has been central to kitchen culture for two decades. The result, at a counter like Kappo Andō, is a menu that shifts not by season in the broad sense but by week, sometimes by day, tracking what Danish and Japanese sourcing networks can deliver at their leading.

Chef Henrik Ando Levinsen anchors this approach, and his position within the Copenhagen scene is worth situating carefully. The city has produced a small cohort of chefs working at the intersection of Japanese craft and Nordic produce, with Kadeau representing the pure Nordic end of that dial and Koan the more explicit kaiseki register. Kappo Andō holds its own corner: the kappo format is less common in Europe than omakase or kaiseki, and the counter's intimacy shapes the entire experience. What you eat is inseparable from where the ingredients came from and what was available that day.

Recognition and Where It Places the Counter

Kappo Andō has no Michelin stars. On the Opinionated About Dining list of Leading Restaurants in Europe, it ranked 435th in 2025 and 432nd in 2024, a placement that keeps it visible in the mid-tier of a highly competitive continental ranking. The OAD list draws on feedback from a community of experienced diners and critics rather than anonymous inspectors, which makes its rankings a different kind of endorsement than Michelin's, one that often catches format-driven or ingredient-focused venues before the guide does.

That recognition points to a list built with some seriousness, which in a Japanese contemporary context typically means a thoughtful approach to pairing across sake, natural wine, and European bottles, though the specific composition of Kappo Andō's list is something to explore on arrival. For those planning an evening in Østerbro with wine as a second priority, the broader context of Copenhagen's bar scene and the city's increasingly strong natural wine culture are worth factoring in.

A Google rating of 4.7 across 125 reviews suggests a small but consistent audience. High marks across a modest review count are a stronger signal than high marks across thousands, because the audience is self-selecting at the more invested end of the dining spectrum.

Østerbro as Context

The restaurant's address in Østerbro places it outside the denser concentration of high-end dining around Vesterbro and the inner city. Østerbro is a residential neighbourhood, and counter restaurants in residential areas tend to operate differently from those in tourist or hospitality clusters: the regulars matter more, the walk-in culture is lower, and the overall atmosphere tilts toward the unhurried. That suits the kappo format well. An evening that runs to midnight implies a room where the pace is set by the food and conversation rather than the cover turn.

Copenhagen's Japanese contemporary category is growing, and Kappo Andō is not the only address worth knowing. For those comparing within that specific niche across Europe, The Japanese Restaurant in Andermatt and Eika in Taipei occupy different geographic and cultural contexts but share the same fundamental commitment to Japanese discipline applied with local inflection.

Planning a Visit

Kappo Andō opens Wednesday through Sunday evenings, with Saturday lunch added from noon to two. The counter format means seat count is limited, and for a restaurant with this recognition profile and a price point in the €€€ range, advance booking is advisable, particularly for Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings. The Saturday lunch sitting is worth noting as a lower-competition window for the same experience in daylight hours. Jordnær in Gentofte to Frederikshøj in Aarhus, Henne Kirkeby Kro, Alimentum in Aalborg, ARO in Odense, and Domæne in Herning.

Signature Dishes
yakitori of the daysashimi with kombu & wasabimonkfish karaage
Frequently asked questions

Comparable Spots

Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Lively
  • Modern
  • Elegant
  • Intimate
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Solo
Experience
  • Chefs Counter
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Sake Program
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Dark wood counter for chef's table seating in a modern, lively atmosphere with hip music and perfect fit for contemporary Japanese cooking.

Signature Dishes
yakitori of the daysashimi with kombu & wasabimonkfish karaage