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Kappo Masa

Kappo Masa sits at the upper tier of New York's Japanese dining scene, operating from a Madison Avenue address under the direction of chef Masayoshi Takayama. The format follows the kappo tradition — counter-led, course-driven, with the kitchen as the focal point of the room. Opinionated About Dining has ranked it among North America's top restaurants in both 2024 and 2025.
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Madison Avenue and the Kappo Tradition
The Upper East Side has long housed a particular kind of serious dining — rooms where the formality is understated, the clientele deliberate, and the food expected to carry its own weight without theatrical distraction. Kappo Masa, at 976 Madison Avenue, fits that pattern while occupying a specifically Japanese frame. The kappo format — where the chef cooks in full view of the guests, often across a counter, and the meal unfolds in discrete courses rather than an à la carte grid , arrived in New York later than omakase sushi and has never spread as widely. That relative scarcity matters for understanding where Kappo Masa sits in the city's Japanese dining hierarchy.
Kappo, as a tradition, originates in Osaka and Kyoto, where it developed as an alternative to the more ceremonial kaiseki format. The chef retains improvisation rights; the courses reflect what is seasonal and what arrived that morning. In Japan, the style is associated with rigorous product sourcing and a cooking vocabulary that spans grilling, simmering, frying, and raw preparation within a single meal. New York's kappo rooms are few, which places any serious practitioner in a peer set measured more against comparable addresses in Tokyo than against the broader New York Japanese dining market. For comparison points beyond New York, Myojaku in Tokyo and Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo represent the benchmark tier for this format in its home city.
Sake, Shochu, and the Beverage Architecture of a Kappo Meal
The editorial angle that separates a considered kappo experience from a merely expensive one is almost always the beverage programme. In the kappo tradition, sake is not an afterthought appended to the meal , it is structural. The sequencing of a kappo dinner, with courses moving across textures, temperatures, and preparation methods, creates more natural pairing pivots than a sushi omakase does. A chilled junmai daiginjo might track alongside lighter raw preparations early in the meal; a richer junmai or even a warm sake can follow as the kitchen moves toward simmered and grilled courses. Shochu , particularly the barley and sweet potato varieties , offers a lower-alcohol, often earthier counterpoint that holds up differently against umami-heavy courses than sake does.
New York's upper-tier Japanese restaurants have become progressively more serious about this pairing architecture over the past decade. Where the early wave of premium Japanese dining in the city treated sake as a by-the-glass curiosity, the current generation of serious counters maintains selections that reflect specific regional styles from Niigata, Yamagata, and Akita producers. A programme of that depth at a kappo counter changes the nature of the meal: courses can be calibrated against what is in the glass as much as against what preceded them on the plate. Within the broader New York Japanese dining field, this beverage seriousness is a meaningful differentiator. Rooms like Odo and Noda occupy adjacent territory in terms of format ambition and the integration of drink into course structure.
The Room and the Counter
The Madison Avenue address places Kappo Masa in a corridor of galleries, boutiques, and a small number of serious restaurants that serve the neighbourhood's particular demographic , collectors, residents of considerable means, and the occasional dinner guest from out of the city who has done the research. The physical environment operates accordingly: the design registers as controlled rather than minimal, with the kind of material quality that reads without announcing itself. The counter remains the operational and experiential core. Watching the kitchen at a kappo counter is not passive entertainment; the cooking is the conversation, and proximity to the preparation is the point of the format.
That spatial logic distinguishes kappo from the large-format Japanese dining rooms that have multiplied across Manhattan. At a dedicated counter, the number of covers is limited by design, not by circumstance, and that limitation structures everything from the pacing of the meal to the specificity of what can be sourced for a given evening. This is a narrower peer set than Japanese dining in New York broadly defined; it is closer in spirit to the omakase counter model, though the cooking vocabulary is considerably wider.
Where It Sits in the New York Japanese Dining Market
Opinionated About Dining, which applies a quantitative methodology drawn from surveyed industry professionals and serious diners, placed Kappo Masa at #400 in its 2024 ranking of North American restaurants and moved it to #461 in 2025 , a signal of continued recognition within a large and competitive field. The 2023 cycle included a Recommended designation before the numbered rankings. In a city where Japanese dining spans everything from the three-Michelin-star counter at Masa (one of the city's most expensive restaurant experiences by any measure) down to neighbourhood sushi that rarely crosses the critical radar, OAD recognition in the ranked tier places Kappo Masa firmly in the upper segment.
For a sense of the range below this tier in terms of Japanese format and price, Tsukimi, Blue Ribbon Sushi Izakaya, and Chikarashi each represent a different point on the accessibility spectrum. Nationally, the OAD cohort that Kappo Masa inhabits includes rooms like Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, The French Laundry in Napa, Providence in Los Angeles, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, and Emeril's in New Orleans , a peer group defined by consistent critical attention across multiple survey cycles rather than by a single award category.
Chef Masayoshi Takayama, whose name is attached to the operation, carries credentials from the highest tier of New York Japanese dining through his association with Masa on Columbus Circle. That lineage functions as a trust signal about the kitchen's product sourcing standards and technical precision, not as a biographical story. In the kappo format, those sourcing standards translate directly to the beverage programme as well: the ingredients and the drinks occupy the same tier of seriousness.
Planning a Visit
Kappo Masa operates lunch and dinner Tuesday through Friday (noon to 2:30 pm and 5:30 to 10:00 pm), dinner only on Saturday (5:30 to 10:00 pm), and remains closed on Sundays. Monday lunch and dinner service also runs on the same pattern as the weekday schedule. The Madison Avenue location , 976 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10075 , is accessible from the Upper East Side's museum corridor and connects naturally with a broader afternoon or evening in the neighbourhood. Given the format's seated-counter nature and the OAD recognition, advance booking is advisable, particularly for weekend dinner.
For broader context on where to eat, drink, and stay around this visit, see our full New York City restaurants guide, our full New York City hotels guide, our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City wineries guide, and our full New York City experiences guide.
Quick reference: 976 Madison Ave, Upper East Side. Lunch and dinner Tue–Fri; dinner only Sat; closed Sun. OAD Leading Restaurants in North America #461 (2025).
- roasted uni half shell
- toro
- eel
- uni custard
- fish pasta with bottarga
- shrimp pasta
Comparable Options
A quick peer list to put this venue’s basics in context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kappo Masa | Japanese | This venue | |
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | $$$$ | French, Seafood, $$$$ |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean | $$$$ | Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$ |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Sushi, Japanese, $$$$ |
| Per Se | French, Contemporary | $$$$ | French, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Eleven Madison Park | French, Vegan | $$$$ | French, Vegan, $$$$ |
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Browse all →At a Glance
- Sophisticated
- Elegant
- Modern
- Lively
- Date Night
- Special Occasion
- Celebration
- Business Dinner
- Chefs Counter
- Open Kitchen
- Design Destination
- Extensive Wine List
- Craft Cocktails
- Sake Program
- Sustainable Seafood
Contemporary and art-filled with an open kitchen, elegant dining area, and beautiful sushi bar; sophisticated yet relaxed atmosphere enhanced by original paintings and warm lighting.
- roasted uni half shell
- toro
- eel
- uni custard
- fish pasta with bottarga
- shrimp pasta




















