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CuisineJapanese Contemporary
LocationMali Lošinj, Croatia
Wine Spectator
Michelin

Matsunoki brings Japanese contemporary cooking to the Čikat promenade in Mali Lošinj, holding a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025. The wine list spans 480 selections across Croatia, France, Italy, and Germany, overseen by Wine Director Filip Veselovac and Sommelier Angelo Mijatovic. Dinner pricing sits at the higher end of the island's dining tier, with a two-course meal typically running €66 or above.

Matsunoki restaurant in Mali Lošinj, Croatia
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Japanese Contemporary on a Croatian Island: Why Matsunoki Makes Sense Here

The Adriatic coast has spent the last decade building a credible fine-dining argument. Michelin-recognised addresses now appear in Rovinj, Split, Dubrovnik, and Sibenik — see Agli Amici Rovinj in Rovinj, Krug in Split, Restaurant 360 in Dubrovnik, and Pelegrini in Sibenik — and the category has matured past the point where Mediterranean cooking with good produce is enough to distinguish a room. Against that backdrop, a Japanese contemporary restaurant on a small Kvarner island is less of an anomaly than it first appears. In the upper tier of Croatian resort dining, cuisine identity has become a differentiator, and Matsunoki occupies a position that no other address on Lošinj holds.

Matsunoki sits on Čikat ul. 9 along the Čikat promenade, one of Mali Lošinj's most settled stretches of hospitality. The address is quiet enough to feel considered, close enough to the waterfront to draw the kind of guest already spending at a certain level. A Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 places it in documented company , Croatia's Michelin-recognised roster is small, and holding the Plate across consecutive years signals consistency rather than a one-cycle highlight.

The Izakaya Spirit, Transposed

Izakaya culture , Japan's tradition of communal eating and drinking where the table is a social event as much as a meal , rarely travels intact to European fine-dining rooms. The format tends to get stripped of its looseness when it moves into tasting-menu territory: the drinking becomes ceremonial, the eating becomes sequential, and the conviviality that defines the original gets replaced by reverence. The more interesting Japanese contemporary addresses in Europe resist that compression. They preserve something of the izakaya's core premise: that food and drink are meant to happen together, interactively, rather than in parallel tracks.

Matsunoki's staffing architecture suggests this kind of integrated approach. The front-of-house team , Wine Director Filip Veselovac, Sommelier Angelo Mijatovic, and General Manager Gianluca Cugnetto , represents a depth of service investment that goes beyond what most island restaurants maintain. A dedicated sommelier and wine director at the same address implies a program designed for tableside engagement, not just bottle delivery. When the wine list runs to 480 selections and nearly 2,880 bottles of inventory, the table becomes a conversation rather than a transaction.

The Wine Program: What 480 Selections Means in Practice

To contextualise that list size: most serious Croatian restaurants operate lists in the 100-to-250 bottle range. A cellar of 480 selections with an inventory count of 2,880 places Matsunoki in a different operational tier entirely. The list draws from Croatia, Slovenia, France (with Bordeaux depth), Italy, and Germany , a geographic range that reflects both regional loyalty and classical European orientation. Pricing is positioned at a mid-tier markup (the list carries a double-dollar marker, indicating a range rather than a uniform premium), and a corkage fee of $55 is available for guests who bring their own bottle, which is itself a signal: a restaurant confident in its own list still accommodating personal selections is one that treats the drinking experience as collaborative.

For guests arriving from Croatia's broader wine circuit, the domestic representation on this list is worth noting. Croatian whites, particularly from the Kvarner and Istrian zones, have built genuine critical traction over the last decade, and a list with explicit Croatian strength , alongside Slovenian representation , suggests a sommelier team that takes the regional category seriously rather than treating it as an obligatory local gesture. For broader context on Croatian fine dining's wine culture, Boskinac in Novalja and Nebo by Deni Srdoč in Rijeka offer useful points of comparison on the mainland and nearby islands.

Chef Orhan Çakıroğlu and the Japanese Contemporary Format in Europe

Japanese contemporary as a category has split into two recognisable streams in European fine dining. One stream runs through French-technique crossover, where Japanese precision meets classical European structure , the approach associated with addresses like The Japanese Restaurant in Andermatt and Eika in Taipei. The other stream is less rigidly codified: it takes Japanese cooking's philosophical priorities , restraint, ingredient integrity, technique over decoration , and applies them to a broader ingredient palette, often including local and seasonal produce from the host country. Matsunoki, operating in a Croatian island context under Chef Orhan Çakıroğlu, sits logically in the latter stream, where Adriatic produce and Japanese discipline are not in conflict but in dialogue.

The cuisine pricing at the $$$ level , two courses at €66 or above , positions it clearly within Croatia's upper restaurant tier, alongside Dubravkin Put in Zagreb, Korak in Jastrebarsko, and LD Restaurant in Korčula. Within Mali Lošinj itself, Alfred Keller offers a modern cuisine alternative at the same address level, giving visitors the island's two most considered options for a serious dinner. For a full picture of what the island offers across categories, our full Mali Lošinj restaurants guide maps the complete field.

Planning Your Visit

Matsunoki is a dinner-only address. Given its Michelin recognition and the limited dining capacity that characterises premium island restaurants during the Adriatic high season (July and August in particular), advance booking is advisable , the window for peak summer dates can close weeks ahead. The address at Čikat ul. 9 is accessible on foot from most of Mali Lošinj's accommodation, with the Čikat promenade running along the western bay. Guests exploring the island's broader offering can find accommodation context in our full Mali Lošinj hotels guide, drinking options in our full Mali Lošinj bars guide, and further exploration in our full Mali Lošinj wineries guide and our full Mali Lošinj experiences guide. The restaurant's Google rating of 4.3 across 119 reviews reflects a consistent guest response rather than a volume-driven average , 119 reviews on a small island venue represents a meaningful sample for a restaurant of this type.

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