Restaurant in Kyoto, Japan
DODICI
450ptsItalian technique, Kyoto ingredients, fixed menu only.

About DODICI
DODICI in Kyoto's Nakagyo Ward serves Italian prix fixe menus built around genuinely local ingredients — Japanese rice risotto, Daitokuji natto, fermentation-led sauces. At ¥¥¥, it sits below kaiseki pricing while offering a more considered take on Italian-Japanese cooking than most of its city peers. Booking is easy; winter visits best align with the kitchen's fermentation-forward preparations.
A different entry point into Kyoto's prix fixe scene
If you're weighing up where to spend ¥¥¥ on a fixed menu in Kyoto, the default pull is toward kaiseki. Kyokaiseki Kichisen and Gion Sasaki will give you the full traditional Japanese arc — seasonal dashi, lacquerware, restrained ceremony. DODICI gives you something structurally different: Italian prix fixe cooking that draws its flavour logic from Kyoto's own larder. For a first-timer deciding between the two, the honest framing is this — if you want to understand Kyoto through its food culture, book kaiseki. If you want to understand what happens when Italian technique genuinely engages with Kyoto ingredients rather than decorating itself with them, DODICI earns its seat at the table.
What DODICI actually is
DODICI sits in Nakagyo Ward at 239 Kamihakusancho and serves prix fixe menus that work with Japanese rice in the risotto, Daitokuji natto, and raw tofu lees , ingredients that are specifically and unmistakably Kyoto rather than generically Japanese. The kitchen's approach isn't fusion in the tourist-menu sense. Salt-pickled vegetables become sauces; fermentation tartness borrowed from Japanese culinary logic runs through the cooking. The result, according to the venue's Michelin-sourced notes, is a menu that reads light on the palate and relaxed in its pacing. The dining room is blue-walled and open-kitchen, which means you get brightness and visibility rather than the hushed enclosure of a traditional kaiseki room. That physical openness is worth noting before you book: DODICI does not recreate a Japanese dining ceremony. It creates its own format.
When to go , and why timing matters here
The emphasis on Japanese seasonal ingredients means your visit window shapes what you're eating in a meaningful way. Kyoto's ingredient calendar is sharply seasonal: spring brings bamboo shoots and young greens; summer shifts toward lighter, cooling preparations; autumn introduces earthy mushrooms and the first of the rice harvest. Winter in Kyoto is the season for fermented and pickled vegetables , the very category that DODICI's kitchen explicitly draws on for its sauces. A winter visit, roughly November through February, is likely to put the most distinctly Kyoto-inflected dishes on your table, particularly the fermentation-led preparations. If you're visiting during cherry blossom season (late March to mid-April), Kyoto is at peak crowding and booking difficulty rises across the city. DODICI's booking is currently rated as easy relative to the Kyoto fine-dining field, so it remains accessible even in peak season , but don't assume that holds indefinitely. Book as soon as your dates are confirmed.
What a first-timer should expect
Walk in expecting a prix fixe only , this is not a venue where you'll build your own meal from a menu. The kitchen decides the arc. The risotto made with Japanese rice is the dish most often cited in Michelin documentation as the clearest expression of the concept: it's a technically Italian preparation anchored by an ingredient that carries entirely different starch behaviour and flavour than Arborio. Daitokuji natto appears as a local Kyoto specificity , the natto from Daitokuji temple has a distinct character compared to the stringier commercial variety most visitors know. If you haven't encountered it before, expect a dry, less pungent profile. The open kitchen means you can watch the preparation, which helps orient a first-timer to what is coming. The pace is described as relaxed, so allow two hours minimum and don't book DODICI as a pre-theatre arrangement.
For comparison in the Italian-in-Japan category, cenci is the other ¥¥¥ Italian option in Kyoto worth considering at the same price tier. Elsewhere in Japan, akordu in Nara takes a comparable approach of European technique applied to Japanese regional produce, and is worth the trip if you're moving between cities. For Italian cooking in Asia at a higher price tier, 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong is the regional benchmark, though the ambition and format are entirely different. If you want a non-Italian comparison for the Japanese-ingredients-through-European-technique format, SEN in Kyoto does the same thing through a French lens at ¥¥¥¥.
How it rates and how to book
DODICI holds a Google rating of 4.6 from 76 reviews , a solid signal for a specialist restaurant with limited covers. The Michelin documentation confirms the cooking concept is coherent and the ingredient sourcing is genuine rather than token. No phone or website is listed in current data, so the most reliable route to a reservation is through a hotel concierge if you're staying at one of Kyoto's better properties, or through a booking platform that covers Kyoto's fixed-menu restaurants. Given the easy booking rating, you should not need to plan months ahead outside of peak seasons , two to three weeks is a reasonable lead time for most of the year.
Reservations: Book 2-3 weeks ahead; via concierge or booking platform (no direct web booking confirmed). Budget: ¥¥¥ price range , mid-tier for Kyoto fine dining, below kaiseki specialist pricing at ¥¥¥¥ venues. Dress: No formal dress code confirmed, but smart casual is appropriate for a prix fixe Italian room. Group size: The open kitchen and dining room format suits pairs or small groups; solo dining is workable given the counter visibility. Timing: Allow at least two hours; winter visits leading align with the kitchen's fermentation-forward preparations.
For more options across the city, see our full Kyoto restaurants guide. If you're planning around a longer stay, our Kyoto hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city's field. Other Italian-leaning options in the Kyoto area include Bini, Vena, BOCCA del VINO, and TAKAYAMA. If you're building a wider Japan itinerary around this category of cooking, HAJIME in Osaka, Harutaka in Tokyo, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa are all worth mapping. For Italian with genuine regional ingredient commitment outside Japan, Frasca Food & Wine in Boulder is a useful comparison point for what committed sourcing looks like in a different geography. For the full Japan picture, our Kyoto wineries guide is also worth a look if you're planning around drink as well as food.
Frequently asked questions
- What should I wear to DODICI? Smart casual is the right call. There is no confirmed formal dress code, and the bright, blue-walled dining room with open kitchen reads contemporary rather than ceremonial. Overdressing for a kaiseki room is unnecessary here , but this is a prix fixe Italian restaurant at ¥¥¥, so trainers and casual street wear would be underdressed.
- Is DODICI good for solo dining? Yes, more so than most Kyoto fine-dining options at this tier. The open kitchen format means a solo diner has something to engage with during the meal, and the relaxed pacing the kitchen aims for doesn't depend on group conversation to fill the room. At ¥¥¥, it's a reasonable solo spend compared to kaiseki venues at ¥¥¥¥ where solo pricing can feel punishing.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at DODICI? At ¥¥¥, yes , provided Italian technique applied to Kyoto ingredients is what you're after. If you want the most authentic expression of Kyoto cuisine for your money, redirect that spend to a kaiseki room. But if you've already done kaiseki and want to see how Daitokuji natto and tofu lees function inside an Italian framework, the menu is coherent and purposeful rather than gimmicky. The Michelin documentation confirms the concept holds.
- What should I order at DODICI? You don't choose , prix fixe only. The risotto made with Japanese rice is the most documented dish and the clearest expression of the kitchen's logic. Expect fermentation-inflected sauces, salt-pickled vegetable preparations, and Daitokuji natto if the menu is running its Kyoto-ingredient focus. The kitchen aims for a light palate across the meal, so don't expect heavy Italian richness.
- What should a first-timer know about DODICI? Come without the assumption that you're eating Italian food with Japanese garnishes. The kitchen draws on Japanese fermentation and pickling logic as a structural cooking tool, not a decoration. Prix fixe only, open kitchen, relaxed pace , allow two hours. Booking is easy relative to Kyoto's fine-dining field, but confirm your reservation as early as your dates are set. Winter is the season most aligned with the fermentation-forward cooking style the kitchen is known for.
Compare DODICI
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DODICI | Italian | ¥¥¥ | Prix fixe menus combine Italian gastronomic experience with Japanese ingredients, as showcased by the risotto of Japanese rice. Raw tofu lees and Daitokuji natto are uniquely Kyoto. The chef strives for a light palate, making eating a relaxed experience. Salt-pickled vegetables are made into sauces, and utilising the tartness of fermentation brings to mind Japanese cuisine. The open kitchen and the spacious, blue-walled dining room feel bright and fresh.; Prix fixe menus combine Italian gastronomic experience with Japanese ingredients, as showcased by the risotto of Japanese rice. Raw tofu lees and Daitokuji natto are uniquely Kyoto. The chef strives for a light palate, making eating a relaxed experience. Salt-pickled vegetables are made into sauces, and utilising the tartness of fermentation brings to mind Japanese cuisine. The open kitchen and the spacious, blue-walled dining room feel bright and fresh. | Easy | — |
| Gion Sasaki | Kaiseki, Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown | — |
| cenci | Italian | ¥¥¥ | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Ifuki | Kaiseki | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Kyokaiseki Kichisen | Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| SEN | French, Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
How DODICI stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to DODICI?
The open kitchen and blue-walled dining room read as relaxed and bright rather than ceremonial, so formal attire is not implied by the setting. Dress neatly — somewhere between business casual and a smart dinner out. This is not a jacket-required kaiseki room, but the ¥¥¥ price point and prix fixe format mean very casual clothes will feel off.
Is DODICI good for solo dining?
The prix fixe format actually suits solo diners well: the kitchen controls the arc, so there are no decisions to negotiate with a group and no pressure to share. The open kitchen gives you something to focus on and the dining room is described as spacious, so you won't feel cramped at a side table. Solo diners at fixed-menu restaurants in Kyoto are common enough that it won't raise eyebrows.
Is the tasting menu worth it at DODICI?
At ¥¥¥, yes — if Italian technique applied to Japanese seasonal produce is a format you're actively seeking. The use of Daitokuji natto, raw tofu lees, and salt-pickled vegetable sauces puts this squarely in cross-cultural territory that kaiseki rooms don't occupy. If you want a more conventional Italian meal, this is not the right room; if you want something that treats Kyoto's ingredient calendar through a different lens, the price is justified.
What should I order at DODICI?
DODICI is prix fixe only — you don't choose individual dishes. The kitchen decides the progression. What the menu is known for includes a risotto made with Japanese rice, preparations using Daitokuji natto and raw tofu lees, and sauces built from salt-pickled vegetables. Expect the menu to shift with Kyoto's seasonal calendar, so what you eat depends substantially on when you visit.
What should a first-timer know about DODICI?
Come expecting a set menu and no alternatives — this is not a venue where you build your own meal. The kitchen's approach is deliberately light: fermentation-driven tartness and Japanese ingredients replace heavy Italian richness, so don't expect a Roman trattoria. Nakagyo Ward is central Kyoto (address: 239 Kamihakusancho), so access is straightforward. Booking ahead is advisable given the limited covers indicated by the review volume.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Kyoto
- OgataOgata is a 16-seat kaiseki counter in Shimogyo, Kyoto, holding two Michelin stars and ten years of Tabelog Gold recognition. Dinner runs JPY 60,000–79,999 before drinks and a 10% service charge. Booking is near impossible without months of advance planning, but for serious kaiseki at the counter, it earns its place on any shortlist.
- MizaiMizai holds three Michelin stars and a sustained Tabelog track record across nearly a decade, with dinner running to ¥80,000–¥99,999 per person all-in. Chef Hitoshi Ishihara structures the meal around the spirit of the tea ceremony in a 15-seat room inside Maruyama Park. Book for a serious special occasion; reservations are near-impossible to secure without months of advance planning.
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