
Cairo's first outpost of the Dubai-born kushiyaki format, Reif Kushiyaki in New Cairo ranked #47 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants MENA list for 2024. The format centres on Japanese skewer traditions adapted for a regional audience, with a 4.3 Google rating across 302 reviews confirming consistent execution. It sits in New Cairo's By The Waterway development, at a remove from the city's older dining districts.

Smoke, Skewers, and a Particular Ritual
There is a specific cadence to a kushiyaki meal that separates it from most other Japanese dining formats. Where omakase demands passive surrender to the chef's sequence, and izakaya encourages loose, convivial disorder, kushiyaki occupies a middle register: structured enough to reward attention, informal enough to sustain conversation. Each skewer arrives on its own terms, at its own moment, grilled over high heat and timed for the table rather than the kitchen's convenience. Reif Kushiyaki Cairo, the first franchise of the Dubai-origin concept to open in Egypt, brings that rhythm to New Cairo's By The Waterway development, a relatively recent commercial strip built along the waterway in New Cairo 3.
The broader context matters here. Cairo's fine-dining scene has historically leaned toward Mediterranean and Levantine references, with Japanese cuisine arriving later and concentrating first in established hotel restaurants and mall-adjacent sushi counters. The arrival of a dedicated kushiyaki operation represents a more specialised bet: that Cairo diners are ready to engage with a format where the grill is the entire point, not a footnote on a pan-Asian menu. The 2024 World's 50 Best Restaurants MENA ranking, which placed Reif Kushiyaki Cairo at #47, is a credentialing signal that the market has validated that bet.
What Kushiyaki Actually Means at the Table
Kushi is the Japanese word for skewer. Yaki means grilled. The compound format encompasses a range of proteins, vegetables, and offal cuts threaded onto bamboo or metal skewers and cooked over charcoal or gas at temperatures that char the exterior while preserving moisture inside. In Japan, kushiyaki is typically an evening format — counter seating, steady pacing, beer or sake alongside, with the grill master controlling tempo from the open kitchen. The sequence tends to move from lighter cuts toward richer, fattier ones, mirroring the logic of a multi-course tasting menu without the formal scaffolding.
At Reif Kushiyaki Cairo, that ritual structure transfers to a New Cairo setting. The parent concept was developed in Dubai, a city where Japanese dining formats have historically received serious investment and a sophisticated diner base. Dubai-born F&B; concepts that franchise into Cairo tend to arrive with a degree of format discipline already established, and Reif Kushiyaki's MENA recognition suggests the Cairo location has maintained the standard rather than diluted it for a new market. A Google rating of 4.3 across 302 reviews indicates that the ritual is landing consistently across different tables and different evenings, which for a format this dependent on timing and heat is the real operational test.
New Cairo's Position in the City's Dining Geography
By The Waterway is part of the broader New Cairo expansion that has pulled dining investment east of the city's traditional centre over the past decade. Zamalek and Downtown retain their historic restaurant density, but New Cairo's purpose-built developments now house some of the city's more format-specific operators. The pattern mirrors what has happened in other MENA cities where new commercial districts absorb the formats that require purpose-built space: kitchens with proper ventilation for live-fire grilling, dining rooms designed around the open grill rather than retrofitted into older buildings.
For visiting diners, the address at 5A By The Waterway, New Cairo 3, places Reif Kushiyaki at a meaningful distance from central Cairo and from the Nile-adjacent districts. This is not a venue you arrive at by accident or fold into a walking evening around Zamalek or Garden City. It is a destination decision, and planning accordingly is part of engaging with it properly. For comparison, Cairo's older dining anchors, including Kazoku and Le Petit Cornichon, operate in more central or established districts. Reif Kushiyaki's position in New Cairo places it within a peer set defined more by format precision than by neighbourhood cachet.
The MENA Recognition and What It Signals
A #47 ranking on the World's 50 Best Restaurants MENA 2024 list is not an endorsement of a specific dish or a particular chef. It is a composite judgment about consistency, identity, and the degree to which a restaurant is doing something that the broader dining community considers worth tracking. For a kushiyaki specialist in Cairo, the ranking positions Reif Kushiyaki alongside operators from across the MENA region who are typically working in more established fine-dining formats: tasting menus, chef-driven concepts, venues with longer track records.
That the Cairo location of a Dubai-born franchise concept holds this position is editorially interesting. Franchise operations in the MENA dining sector often sacrifice format rigour for scalability. The recognition here suggests the opposite has occurred: the Cairo outlet has preserved enough of the original concept's discipline to register as a credible peer to independently operated restaurants. For context, internationally recognised operations such as Le Bernardin in New York City or Atomix in New York City represent what format-specific excellence looks like at the highest tier globally. MENA regional recognition operates in a different weight class, but the underlying judgment is the same: does the venue do what it claims to do, and does it do it well enough to be taken seriously by peers?
Placing Reif Kushiyaki in Cairo's Wider Japanese Scene
Cairo's Japanese dining options have expanded considerably in the past five years, but they remain skewed toward sushi and broader pan-Asian formats. A dedicated live-fire skewer operation is a narrower proposition. Sachi Cairo represents one pole of Cairo's Japanese dining range, while Reif Kushiyaki occupies a different coordinate: format-specific, grill-centred, and structured around a dining ritual that requires engagement from the diner rather than passive selection from a wide menu. That specificity is what makes the MENA ranking intelligible: the restaurant is not competing across the full breadth of Japanese cuisine but rather making a concentrated case within a defined format.
For a different register of the Cairo dining scene, the contrast with Zooba (Zamalek) is instructive. Zooba's Egyptian street-food format and central Zamalek location represent a different approach to casual precision in Cairo. Both venues have achieved recognition within their formats. Reif Kushiyaki's proposition is simply more specific and more demanding of the diner's time and attention. See also our coverage of Khufus in Giza and La Maison Bleue in El Gouna for a broader picture of Egyptian dining operating beyond Cairo's central districts.
Planning a Visit
Reif Kushiyaki Cairo is located at 5A By The Waterway Developments, New Cairo 3, Cairo Governorate. Given the New Cairo address, driving or a ride-hailing service is the practical approach from central Cairo. The venue's Google presence with 302 reviews confirms it is well-indexed and findable through standard mapping applications. No specific booking method is listed in public records, so arriving without a reservation carries some risk, particularly given the MENA recognition that has raised its profile among regional dining travellers. Contacting the venue directly through available channels before visiting is advisable. Reif Kushiyaki sits within a broader ecosystem of Cairo dining worth exploring in full through our full Cairo restaurants guide. For accommodation planning, our full Cairo hotels guide covers the city's range. Drinking options before or after are mapped in our full Cairo bars guide. For those extending beyond the city, our full Cairo wineries guide and our full Cairo experiences guide provide further orientation.
For international reference points on what format-specific excellence looks like in live-fire dining contexts, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Emeril's in New Orleans, 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong, Alain Ducasse at Louis XV in Monte Carlo, and Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen in Paris each demonstrate the degree to which a restaurant can build sustained identity around a singular format commitment.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What dish is Reif Kushiyaki Cairo famous for?
- Reif Kushiyaki Cairo centres on kushiyaki, the Japanese tradition of skewered grills, with kushi meaning skewer in Japanese. The concept originated in Dubai and arrived in Cairo as its first franchise, focusing the entire menu around grill-based skewer preparations rather than the broader pan-Asian formats that dominate much of Cairo's Japanese dining scene. Its #47 ranking on the World's 50 Best Restaurants MENA 2024 list reflects the overall format's execution rather than a single signature dish.
- Do I need a reservation for Reif Kushiyaki Cairo?
- Given Reif Kushiyaki Cairo's recognition as the #47 restaurant on the World's 50 Best Restaurants MENA 2024 list and its consistent 4.3 Google rating across 302 reviews, demand is demonstrably present. No formal booking method is listed in public records, but visiting without prior contact at a venue with this level of regional recognition carries meaningful risk. Reaching out through the venue's available channels before arriving is the sensible approach, particularly on weekends or during peak Cairo dining periods.
- What do critics highlight about Reif Kushiyaki Cairo?
- The venue's placement at #47 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants MENA 2024 list is the clearest available critical signal. As the first Cairo franchise of a Dubai-born kushiyaki concept, the recognition suggests the location has maintained format discipline rather than adapting its core proposition downward for a new market. The consistent 4.3 rating across more than 300 Google reviews reinforces that judgment across a broader sample of dining experiences.
- Can Reif Kushiyaki Cairo adjust for dietary needs?
- The venue's public records do not include menu specifics or stated dietary accommodation policies. If dietary requirements are a factor, contacting the restaurant directly before visiting is the appropriate step. Cairo's dining scene broadly has become more attentive to dietary variation in recent years, and for further guidance on the city's restaurant options, our full Cairo restaurants guide maps the range across cuisine types and formats.
- How does Reif Kushiyaki Cairo compare to other Japanese dining options in Cairo?
- Cairo's Japanese dining scene spans sushi counters, pan-Asian menus, and broader Japanese-influenced formats, but dedicated kushiyaki specialists are rare. Reif Kushiyaki Cairo positions itself within the narrowest tier: a grill-specific format built around sequential skewer service, which is a different dining proposition from choosing rolls or sashimi from a wide menu. Its 2024 MENA ranking confirms it is operating at a level of format precision that differentiates it from more generalist Japanese offerings in the city.
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