Komada occupies a quiet address in Kawasaki, Ise, a city whose proximity to the Ise Grand Shrine and the Mie coastline makes it one of Japan's most ingredient-rich dining territories. The restaurant sits within a regional tradition where access to Ise-ebi lobster, Pacific abalone, and Matsusaka beef shapes what ends up on the counter. For travellers already planning a visit to Ise Jingu, it represents a direct connection between pilgrimage geography and the food that geography produces.
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- Address
- 2 Chome-14-18 Kawasaki, Ise, Mie 516-0009, Japan
- Phone
- +81596287747
- Website
- ise-komada.com

Where the Shrine Road Meets the Plate
Komada is an Edo-style omakase sushi restaurant in Ise, Mie, where the city's culinary identity announces itself before any menu does. This is a town built around movement: millions of pilgrims have passed through for centuries en route to Ise Jingu, Japan's most sacred Shinto shrine complex, and the provisioning culture that grew up to feed them never disappeared. It evolved. The fish markets, the Matsusaka cattle routes, the abalone diving communities of the Shima Peninsula, all of these supply chains converge on a small city that punches well above its size in raw ingredient quality. Komada, at 2 Chome-14-18 Kawasaki, sits inside that geography rather than apart from it.
Mie Prefecture as a Sourcing Argument
Few prefectures in Japan make a stronger case for ingredient-led cooking than Mie. The Pacific coast delivers Ise-ebi, the spiny lobster that carries the city's name and commands a premium at counters from Tokyo to Osaka. The ama divers of Toba and Shima have harvested abalone, turban shells, and sea urchin from these waters for over two thousand years, using breath-hold techniques that leave the seabed undisturbed. Inland, the Matsusaka cattle lineage, female Japanese Black cows raised within a defined zone of the prefecture, produces beef with a marbling profile that has influenced how Japan thinks about premium wagyu. A kitchen in Ise that sources honestly from its own prefecture has access to a larder that restaurants in major cities pay significant import premiums to replicate. That proximity is not incidental; it is the structural advantage that shapes what serious cooking here can aspire to.
This sourcing reality also frames how Komada sits relative to peers in the region. Restaurants such as Kamimura, Yamatoan kuroishi, 伏藁 三ツ星, and ボン ヴィヴァン all operate within the same ingredient ecosystem. The differentiation between them lies in how each kitchen interprets what the prefecture provides, which relationships with producers they prioritise, which techniques they apply, and which seasonal windows they build their menus around.
The Regional Counter in Context
Japan's most-discussed dining is concentrated in Tokyo, Osaka, and Kyoto, where Michelin density and international visibility create a self-reinforcing reputation cycle. Counters such as Harutaka in Tokyo and Gion Sasaki in Kyoto operate inside that system, where critic attention and allocation demand compound over time. The restaurants of Ise operate outside it, not because the cooking is lesser, but because the city's population base and tourism model are different. Pilgrimage traffic is high-volume but often day-trip driven; the traveller who stays for dinner and thinks carefully about where to eat remains a smaller subset. That dynamic means serious Ise restaurants draw a more local and regionally committed clientele alongside the informed visitor, a guest profile that tends to reward consistency over spectacle.
Across Japan's secondary cities, this pattern repeats: Goh in Fukuoka and akordu in Nara both operate in markets where the absence of metropolitan pressure allows a different kind of focus. Ingredient sourcing becomes more explicit when the supply chain is shorter. The restaurant doesn't need to explain provenance through a menu story, the diner often already knows the fisherman's name, or at least the port.
Placing Komada on the Ise Map
The Kawasaki address puts Komada within the older commercial fabric of the city, a district that has retained a working, lived-in character distinct from the more tourist-oriented corridors closer to Oharai-machi. Restaurants in this part of Ise tend to draw on a consistent local clientele rather than relying on pilgrimage-season spikes alone, which typically translates into a more stable and considered kitchen rhythm.
For the traveller calibrating expectations against other Japan destinations covered in the EP Club network, the reference point is less the three-star omakase tier represented by HAJIME in Osaka and more the focused regional specialist model, comparable in intent, if not in international profile, to venues like 一本木 石川製 in Nanao or 湖畔荘庵 in Takashima, where the sourcing story is inseparable from the dining proposition. Internationally, the approach rhymes with what Le Bernardin in New York City does with Atlantic seafood provenance, or what Atomix in New York City demonstrates about regional Korean ingredients filtered through technical precision.
Planning a Visit
The city's restaurant scene is relatively compact, which makes combining Komada with other Kawasaki-district dining or a morning visit to the Naiku precinct of Ise Jingu genuinely practical rather than aspirational. Komada takes reservations and is typically open daily from 6 to 10 PM.
For broader regional comparison while building a Kansai or Tokai itinerary, the EP Club covers adjacent dining territories including Bistro Ange in Toyohashi, Birdland in Sakai, 古代山乃井 in Sapporo, and 庄羽屋 in Nishikawa Machi.
Fast Comparison
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| KomadaThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Edo-style Omakase Sushi | $$$$ | , | |
| Kamimura | Kaiseki | $$$$ | , | Miyamachi |
| ボン ヴィヴァン | Classic French with Local Ise Ingredients | $$$ | , | Geku |
| butasute Wakayanagi | Traditional Ise beef sukiyaki & yakiniku | $$$ | , | Miyamachi |
| Mukai Sake no Mise | Seafood-focused Japanese izakaya with strong sake program | $$ | , | Miyago, Ise |
| Akafuku Honten | Traditional Japanese sweets & tea house | $ | , | Oharaimachi |
Continue exploring
More in Ise
At a Glance
- Elegant
- Intimate
- Sophisticated
- Hidden Gem
- Special Occasion
- Date Night
- Chefs Counter
- Sake Program
- Local Sourcing
Richly atmospheric Japanese hideout with elegant, quiet counter seating.









