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Dubai, United Arab Emirates

REIF Japanese Kushiyaki - Dar Wasl

CuisineJapanese Contemporary
Executive ChefEric Chong
Price$
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseLively
CapacitySmall
Michelin

REIF Japanese Kushiyaki at Dar Wasl Mall holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition for 2024 and 2025, making it one of Dubai's clearest examples of accessible Japanese precision. Chef Eric Chong leads a kushiyaki-focused menu that draws on Japanese skewer traditions while operating at a price point well below the city's prestige omakase tier. A 4.6 Google rating across more than 1,200 reviews confirms sustained crowd appeal alongside critical approval.

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Address
Dar Wasl Mall - Al Wasl Rd - Al Wasl - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
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REIF Japanese Kushiyaki - Dar Wasl restaurant in Dubai, United Arab Emirates
About

Skewer Culture and the Case for Kansai Informality in Dubai

Dubai's Japanese dining scene has long skewed toward the theatrical end of the register: omakase counters charging several hundred dirhams per head, DJ-fuelled pan-Asian dining rooms, and hotel restaurants that position Japan as a vehicle for premium branding. The quieter tradition of kushiyaki, the Osaka-rooted practice of grilling small bites over binchōtan charcoal and eating without ceremony, has been slower to find a foothold. REIF Japanese Kushiyaki at Dar Wasl Mall sits firmly in that latter category, and two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards, in 2024 and 2025, confirm that the format has earned its place in a city not historically known for rewarding restraint at accessible price points.

The Bib Gourmand designation is specific in what it signals: good cooking at moderate cost, as assessed by the same inspectors who award stars to the city's prestige tables. Holding it in back-to-back years places REIF among Dubai restaurants that have demonstrated consistency rather than a single strong season. For the visitor cross-referencing this against the city's broader Japanese tier, the likes of 99 Sushi Bar, Akira Back, or Armani Hashi, REIF occupies a different competitive set entirely: lower price point, more focused format, and an emphasis on technique over setting.

The Kansai Logic of Kushiyaki

To understand what REIF is doing, it helps to understand the regional tradition it draws from. Japanese grilling culture divides broadly between yakitori, associated with Tokyo's izakaya alleys and a Kanto sensibility of soy-forward seasoning and chicken-centric skewers, and kushiyaki, the broader Kansai category that encompasses a wider range of proteins, vegetables, and offcuts cooked over charcoal with comparatively lighter seasoning. Osaka's Shinsekai district is the historical reference point: standing counters, low prices, lager and skewers, no fuss.

The contemporary version of that tradition tends to preserve the format's informality while upgrading ingredients and technique. Binchōtan charcoal, the dense, slow-burning white charcoal that produces high, even heat with minimal smoke, remains the method of choice in serious kushiyaki kitchens because it allows the cook to control temperature across multiple skewers simultaneously without imparting harsh flavour. The sequencing of skewers, from lighter to richer cuts, follows the same logic as an omakase progression, just at a fraction of the cost and with considerably less ritual. For context, the approaches at Eika in Taipei and Sankai by Nagaya in Istanbul show different interpretations of the same source tradition.

Chef Eric Chong and the Dubai Accessible-Japanese Tier

Chef Eric Chong leads the kitchen at REIF. Within the broader context of Dubai's Japanese contemporary scene, his work here is notable less for biographical trajectory and more for where it sits in the city's price and quality matrix. Dubai has a tendency to conflate prestige with price, which makes Michelin recognition at the dollar-sign tier meaningful in a different way than it would be in Tokyo or Osaka, where cheap-and-excellent is the norm rather than the exception.

The comparison set within Dubai's value-conscious Japanese tier is limited. 3Fils in Jumeirah Fishing Harbour has built a similar reputation for quality at accessible prices, and both restaurants have demonstrated that the market exists. Mimi Kakushi occupies a different tier and aesthetic register entirely, leaning into the Four Seasons address and higher price positioning. REIF's location in Dar Wasl Mall on Al Wasl Road places it in a neighbourhood retail context rather than a waterfront or hotel setting, which reinforces the Kansai informality of the format.

4.6 Across 1,200 Reviews: What Volume Signals

A Google rating of 4.6 drawn from 1,492 reviews is a different data point than a Michelin award, it measures sustained satisfaction across a much wider and less curated audience. Maintaining a 4.6 at that volume means the kitchen is performing consistently on weekday visits, during quieter periods, and for guests who arrived without the context of a critical recommendation. In a city where restaurant quality can vary sharply between the launch period and six months in, longevity of score at volume is meaningful evidence of operational discipline.

For travellers building a Dubai itinerary that spans multiple formats, REIF offers a grounded meal between richer experiences.

If Abu Dhabi is on the itinerary, NIRI in Abu Dhabi offers another Japanese contemporary reference point, while Erth in Abu Dhabi addresses a completely different cuisine tradition for contrast. For those tracing how Japanese technique has been interpreted in European contexts, 893 Ryotei in Berlin, Izakaya in Zagreb, and The Japanese Restaurant in Andermatt each offer a different inflection on the same source tradition. In Latin America, Murakami in São Paulo demonstrates how Japanese contemporary cooking has absorbed local ingredient culture in a way that parallels what Dubai's dining scene is attempting through its own multicultural lens.

Know Before You Go

DetailInformation
AddressDar Wasl Mall, Al Wasl Road, Al Wasl, Dubai, UAE
CuisineJapanese Contemporary / Kushiyaki
Price Range$ (accessible; Bib Gourmand tier)
AwardsMichelin Bib Gourmand 2024 and 2025
Google Rating4.6 from 1,208 reviews
ChefEric Chong
BookingContact venue directly; walk-ins may be possible given the format
Signature Dishes
  • Wagyu Katsu Sando
  • Beef Gyoza
  • Chicken Robata
  • Clay Pot Rice with Wagyu
  • Matcha Fondue
  • Crispy Calamari Kushi
  • Beef with Truffle Mayo
Frequently asked questions

Cuisine Context

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

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Lively
  • Minimalist
  • Trendy
  • Hidden Gem
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Celebration
  • Group Dining
  • Casual Hangout
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
  • Chefs Counter
Drink Program
  • Zero Proof
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelLively
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Minimalist interior with white walls and wooden tables; lively and energetic with open kitchen views of chefs cooking over flames; casual yet sophisticated atmosphere.

Signature Dishes
  • Wagyu Katsu Sando
  • Beef Gyoza
  • Chicken Robata
  • Clay Pot Rice with Wagyu
  • Matcha Fondue
  • Crispy Calamari Kushi
  • Beef with Truffle Mayo