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Modern Tempura Omakase
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Nagoya, Japan

Tempura Niitome (天風良 にい留)

Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseQuiet
CapacityIntimate

Sukiya-style entrance, noren curtain, Edo-period antiques arranged with the care of a private collection: the room at Tempura Niitome signals, before a single piece of batter hits the oil, that this is not a casual counter. Chef Shuji Niitome runs a course-only format in a quiet residential pocket of Nagoya's Higashi Ward, near Takaoka Station on the Sakura-dori line, where the surrounding streets do little to prepare first-time visitors for the precision inside. The course moves through appetizers before arriving at roughly thirteen tempura pieces, each fried to a light, thin batter that keeps the focus on ingredient quality rather than coating. The closing sequence gives diners a choice between ten-don, tempura chazuke, or tenbara, a structural decision that lets the kitchen end on a register that suits the guest rather than defaulting to a single house finish. That kind of considered flexibility is less common at tempura counters of this calibre than the format might suggest. Tempura Niitome holds 2 Michelin stars and Tabelog Gold recognition, two of the more demanding benchmarks in Japanese restaurant evaluation. The price point reflects both: published reservation listings reference an ¥8,000 booking fee applied on top of the course price, with independent coverage characterising the total spend in the US$400–700 range per person. That positions Niitome at the upper end of specialist tempura dining in Japan, comparable in cost to multi-starred kaiseki in Kyoto or high-end sushi omakase in Tokyo, though the format and intimacy differ considerably. Nagoya's fine-dining scene operates largely below the international radar that Tokyo and Kyoto attract, which makes the concentration of serious cooking here easy to underestimate. Niitome is one of the clearer arguments against that assumption: a two-starred, Tabelog Gold-recognised tempura counter in a city that rewards the traveller willing to look past the obvious itinerary stops.

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Address
東区泉2丁目19-11 キャストビル泉2F, 名古屋市, 愛知県, 461-0001
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Tempura Niitome (天風良 にい留) restaurant in Nagoya, Japan
About

Sukiya-style entrance, noren curtain, Edo-period antiques arranged with the care of a private collection: the room at Tempura Niitome signals, before a single piece of batter hits the oil, that this is not a casual counter. Chef Shuji Niitome runs a course-only format in a quiet residential pocket of Nagoya's Higashi Ward, near Takaoka Station on the Sakura-dori line, where the surrounding streets do little to prepare first-time visitors for the precision inside.

The course moves through appetizers before arriving at roughly thirteen tempura pieces, each fried to a light, thin batter that keeps the focus on ingredient quality rather than coating. The closing sequence gives diners a choice between ten-don, tempura chazuke, or tenbara, a structural decision that lets the kitchen end on a register that suits the guest rather than defaulting to a single house finish. That kind of considered flexibility is less common at tempura counters of this calibre than the format might suggest.

Tempura Niitome holds 2 Michelin stars and Tabelog Gold recognition, two of the more demanding benchmarks in Japanese restaurant evaluation. The price point reflects both: published reservation listings reference an ¥8,000 booking fee applied on top of the course price, with independent coverage characterising the total spend in the US$400–700 range per person. That positions Niitome at the upper end of specialist tempura dining in Japan, comparable in cost to multi-starred kaiseki in Kyoto or high-end sushi omakase in Tokyo, though the format and intimacy differ considerably.

Nagoya's fine-dining scene operates largely below the international radar that Tokyo and Kyoto attract, which makes the concentration of serious cooking here easy to underestimate. Niitome is one of the clearer arguments against that assumption: a two-starred, Tabelog Gold-recognised tempura counter in a city that rewards the traveller willing to look past the obvious itinerary stops.

Reputation & Price

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

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Intimate
  • Modern
Best For
  • Special Occasion
  • Date Night
Experience
  • Chefs Counter
Drink Program
  • Sake Program
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Serene Japanese atmosphere in a quiet residential area with a meticulous counter dining experience.