.png)
At Hotel Urban Anaga in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Kiki holds consecutive Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) for Japanese-inflected cooking grounded in Canary Islands produce. Two à la carte formats and two tasting menus sit at the mid-range price point, with the sushi bar and cocktail counter giving the room a dual identity that few Japanese addresses on the island match.

Japanese Technique, Atlantic Ingredients
Inside Hotel Urban Anaga on Calle Imeldo Serís, the room announces its intentions before a dish arrives. Japanese-inspired murals run across the walls, neon lighting casts the sushi bar in a warm, deliberate glow, and a cocktail station operates alongside the kitchen counter with enough visibility to function as a secondary focal point. It is a considered environment rather than an incidental one, the kind of space where aesthetic choices carry programmatic weight. In a city where most mid-range restaurant interiors lean toward either rustic Atlantic or generic contemporary, the visual commitment here is a statement about the kitchen's orientation.
The broader context matters. Santa Cruz de Tenerife has developed a layered dining scene that moves from Canarian tradition at addresses like El Aguarde (Traditional Cuisine) through contemporary registers at Moral (Contemporary) and into the protein-driven territory of Etéreo by Pedro Nel (Meats and Grills). Japanese cuisine occupies a smaller niche within that spread. The direct peer comparison is Shibui, which operates at a higher price tier (€€€) with a format closer to traditional Japanese precision. Kiki sits at €€, a middle-market position it justifies through a format designed to carry the technical vocabulary of Japanese cooking into more accessible territory without abandoning the ingredient logic underpinning it.
What the Menu Is Actually Doing
The format structure is specific and worth reading carefully before booking. Two à la carte menus run simultaneously: one traditional, one fusion. Two tasting menus layer on leading of those, a shorter format and a longer one named after the restaurant itself. This is not a restaurant that presents a single editorial vision and asks you to follow it; it is a restaurant that has mapped out different entry points into the same ingredient philosophy, then left the decision to the diner.
That ingredient philosophy is what connects the Japanese technique to the Canary Islands context. Seasonal produce from the archipelago provides the raw materials; the kitchen's role is to process those materials through Japanese cooking logic rather than impose Japanese pantry items onto Atlantic produce. The distinction matters in places where the local agricultural supply is genuinely distinctive. The Canary Islands' climate and soil conditions produce ingredients with specific flavor profiles, and a kitchen that treats those as primary, rather than supplementary, is working with a different supply chain than most Japanese restaurants operating outside Japan.
The Akami-Crunchy nigiri is the most cited individual piece: crunchy rice as the base, spicy tuna tartare as the topping, serrano peppers for cut and heat. The technique is legible as Japanese in structure while the flavor profile incorporates Iberian pantry logic. It is a useful single example of the broader hybrid argument the menu is making, and the fact that the restaurant names it explicitly in its own materials suggests it functions as a reliable signal of the kitchen's approach rather than a seasonal anomaly. Nigiri at this register, where the rice texture is manipulated to add contrast and the fish is processed rather than presented raw, occupies a different section of the Japanese technique spectrum from the restrained, temperature-precise omakase counters you find at addresses like Myojaku or Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo. That is not a criticism; it is a categorization. The ambition here is fusion coherence rather than traditional purity.
The Canary Islands as a Source Region
Spanish fine dining at the highest tier, from El Celler de Can Roca in Girona through Arzak in San Sebastián to Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, has spent decades articulating the relationship between regional ingredient identity and cooking ambition. The Canary Islands version of that conversation is younger and less documented, but the volcanic soil conditions, year-round growing season, and Atlantic fishing access give the archipelago a raw material profile that rewards the kind of ingredient-forward thinking Kiki is applying. Restaurants like Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María have demonstrated what happens when chefs treat Atlantic marine ingredients as primary rather than contextual. Kiki is applying a version of that logic but running it through a Japanese rather than Andalusian technical framework.
The seasonal emphasis means the menu cycles with what the islands produce. This creates variability that rewards repeat visits but also means a single visit captures one seasonal moment rather than a fixed identity. The two à la carte formats give some stability since the traditional menu presumably anchors certain preparations while the fusion format accommodates more responsive cooking.
Michelin Plate Recognition and Peer Position
The Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 confirms that the guide's inspectors find the cooking to be at a recognized level of quality. A Plate designation signals competent, sometimes excellent cooking without the critical elevation of a star; it is the guide's way of marking a restaurant as worth attention within its category. For a Japanese fusion address at the €€ tier in a Canary Islands city, back-to-back Plate recognition is a meaningful signal. It places Kiki in a different conversation from the broader Santa Cruz dining pool and gives a reference point for travelers who use Michelin recognition as a calibration tool.
Duke represents another reference point within the city's dining character. For a fuller map of where Santa Cruz's restaurants sit by cuisine, price tier, and critical recognition, see our full Santa Cruz de Tenerife restaurants guide. Readers planning a broader trip will also find context in our full Santa Cruz de Tenerife hotels guide, our full Santa Cruz de Tenerife bars guide, our full Santa Cruz de Tenerife wineries guide, and our full Santa Cruz de Tenerife experiences guide.
Planning a Visit
Kiki operates within Hotel Urban Anaga at Calle Imeldo Serís, 19, in the 38003 postal district of Santa Cruz de Tenerife. The hotel address means the restaurant is accessible for hotel guests and walk-in diners alike, though the 4.8 rating across 688 Google reviews suggests demand is consistent enough to warrant a reservation rather than a speculative arrival. The price range sits at €€, competitive with peers like Moral and Etéreo by Pedro Nel at the same tier, and noticeably below the €€€ position held by Shibui. The cocktail bar alongside the dining room makes it a workable single-stop evening rather than a dinner-only format.
Frequently Asked Questions
What do regulars order at Kiki?
The Akami-Crunchy nigiri is the most referenced item: crunchy rice, spicy tuna tartare, and serrano peppers. It illustrates the fusion approach that defines the menu, applying Japanese nigiri construction to Iberian pantry logic. Beyond individual pieces, the pattern among returning diners points toward the nigiris as a category rather than the broader à la carte, which suggests the sushi bar format is where the kitchen is doing its most identifiable work. For context on how the menu structure compares to the Spanish-influenced fusion at DiverXO in Madrid or the contemporary register at Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, Kiki is a more accessible, less chef-personality-driven version of the cross-cultural cooking impulse.
What is the leading way to book Kiki?
Kiki is located inside Hotel Urban Anaga, which provides a physical booking route through the hotel concierge for guests staying on-site. Given the 4.8 score across nearly 700 reviews and back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition, the restaurant draws a consistent volume of visitors. At the €€ price point in a city with a growing dining reputation, walk-in availability on evenings or weekends should not be assumed. Contacting the hotel directly and confirming the current booking method is the most reliable approach, particularly if you want to secure one of the longer tasting menus rather than the à la carte.
The Essentials
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Notes | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Kiki | This venue | €€ |
| San Sebastián 57 | Seasonal Cuisine, €€ | €€ |
| El Aguarde | Traditional Cuisine, €€ | €€ |
| Etéreo by Pedro Nel | Meats and Grills, €€ | €€ |
| Moral | Contemporary, €€ | €€ |
| Shibui | Japanese, €€€ | €€€ |
Need a table?
Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.
Access the Concierge