Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
eman
415Pearl PointsEasier to book than the cooking deserves.

About eman
eman in Kiyosumi Shirakawa delivers Michelin Plate-recognised Spanish cooking at ¥¥¥ pricing, with low booking pressure and a clear point of view: Japanese seasonal ingredients expressed through Spanish regional forms, anchored by rice. It sits below ZURRIOLA on formality and price but above the rice-specialist category in ambition. Book it when you want serious cooking without the reservation difficulty of Tokyo's starred venues.
Should You Book eman?
Getting a table at eman is easier than you might expect given what it delivers. Booking difficulty is low relative to the calibre of cooking, which makes this one of the more practical decisions you can make if you're looking for serious Spanish cuisine in Tokyo. The Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 signals that the food is technically credible, and the Google rating of 4.7 across 85 reviews suggests consistent execution rather than a one-off performance. If you've visited once and are wondering whether to return, the answer is yes — and you should push further into the rice dishes.
What eman Does
eman operates out of Kiyosumi Shirakawa, a neighbourhood better known for its specialty coffee scene than its dining, which partly explains why this restaurant doesn't face the same booking pressure as comparable venues in Shinjuku or Ginza. Chef Satoru Kobayashi has built a menu around a specific thesis: that Japanese seasonal ingredients and Spanish regional cooking traditions are not in conflict, but can be expressed through the same dishes. The vehicle for this is rice. The kitchen runs Spanish and Japanese rice preparations in parallel — not as a gimmick, but as a genuine structural organising principle for the menu.
The signature example is clams on rice, drawn from Basque cooking but arranged in the style of Fukagawa-meshi, the traditional Tokyo dish of asari clams in miso soup poured over rice. The cultural reference is specific and the execution is reportedly careful. For the squid-ink paella, firefly squid are used in place of the more common cuttlefish or generic squid, a seasonal Japanese ingredient choice that shifts the dish's flavour register without abandoning its Spanish form. These are not fusion experiments , they are considered decisions about where two regional food traditions overlap at the ingredient level.
The menu extends beyond rice to tapas and char-grilled dishes, giving the meal a broader Spanish structure. The range signals genuine depth in the Spanish culinary reference points rather than a narrow focus on one region. For a returning visitor, the rice courses are the clearest expression of what eman does differently from other Spanish restaurants in Tokyo. But the wider menu means a second visit can cover ground the first one didn't.
The Space
Address , 1 Chome-3-6 Shirakawa, Koto City , places eman in a quieter eastern pocket of Tokyo, away from the concentrated fine-dining corridors. The area around Kiyosumi Shirakawa has a low-density residential and light-industrial character, which typically means smaller, more intimate restaurant spaces rather than the large-format dining rooms common in central Tokyo hotel venues. Seat count is not confirmed in available data, but venues of this type and price point in this neighbourhood tend to be compact, which affects the experience: quieter, less formal, more focused on the food than on a produced atmosphere. That spatial character suits the cooking well , this is not a restaurant where the room competes with the plate for your attention.
The Editorial Angle: Casual Excellence
eman is priced at ¥¥¥, which positions it below the ¥¥¥¥ tier occupied by many of Tokyo's most reservation-pressured restaurants. At that price point, the Michelin Plate recognition is meaningful , it indicates that the kitchen is operating at a level the guide's inspectors found worth flagging, without the full star infrastructure (waiting staff depth, service choreography, room investment) that typically accompanies it. That gap between recognition and price is where eman's value lies. You are getting cooking that has passed a credible professional threshold at a cost and with a booking friction that is significantly lower than the starred venues around it.
For context, Spanish cuisine at this quality level in Tokyo is a small category. ZURRIOLA operates at the higher end of that category. ARROCERÍA La Panza and Arrocería Sal y Amor are more specifically focused on rice dishes, making them direct comparisons for that part of eman's menu. ENEKO Tokyo and LANBRoA round out the Basque-influenced end of the Spanish spectrum in the city. Within that group, eman's specific value proposition , seasonal Japanese ingredients expressed through Spanish regional forms, with rice as the central organising idea , is distinct enough to justify its own visit rather than treating it as a substitute for any of the others.
Practical Details
Reservations: Booking difficulty is rated easy , you do not need to plan weeks ahead, though confirming in advance is sensible. Location: Kiyosumi Shirakawa, Koto City , accessible via the Tokyo Metro Hanzomon and Toei Oedo lines. Budget: ¥¥¥ price tier, positioning this as a mid-to-upper range dinner without the full outlay of Tokyo's starred venues. Dress: No formal dress code confirmed; the neighbourhood and venue character suggest smart casual is appropriate. Hours: Not confirmed in available data , check directly before visiting. Phone/Website: Not listed; reservation via a booking platform or direct contact through search is advisable.
How It Compares
Further Reading
Planning a broader Tokyo trip: our full Tokyo restaurants guide covers the full spectrum. For where to stay, see our Tokyo hotels guide. If you're interested in the bar scene, our Tokyo bars guide is a useful companion. Visitors exploring Japan more widely should look at HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, akordu in Nara (which has its own Basque-Japanese intersection), Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa. For Spanish cooking outside Japan, BCN Taste & Tradition in Houston and Xiquet by Danny Lledo in Washington, D.C. offer useful points of comparison. See also our Tokyo wineries guide and our Tokyo experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What should I order at eman? Prioritise the rice dishes , they are the clearest expression of what the kitchen does. The clams on rice (Basque-meets-Fukagawa-meshi) and the squid-ink paella using firefly squid are the dishes most specific to eman's approach. The tapas and char-grilled courses are worth ordering to cover the full Spanish menu structure, but the rice courses are why you're here.
- How far ahead should I book eman? Booking difficulty is rated easy, so you don't need to plan far in advance. A few days ahead should be sufficient for most nights. That said, confirming before you travel is sensible , the restaurant is small and a full house would limit your options.
- Is eman good for solo dining? Yes, more so than many comparable venues. The Kiyosumi Shirakawa location, compact room, and relatively relaxed atmosphere make it a comfortable solo experience. At ¥¥¥ pricing, it's also a considered but not excessive spend for a solo meal. Counter seating, if available, would be the ideal option for a solo visitor.
- What are alternatives to eman in Tokyo? For Spanish rice specifically, ARROCERÍA La Panza and Arrocería Sal y Amor are the most direct comparisons. For a broader Spanish fine-dining experience, ZURRIOLA operates at a higher price and formality tier. For Basque-influenced cooking, LANBRoA is worth considering. None of these replicate eman's specific Japanese-seasonal-meets-Spanish-regional structure.
- Is eman good for a special occasion? It depends on what kind of occasion. If you want a relaxed, food-focused dinner where the cooking does the work without heavy service ceremony, eman fits well. If the occasion calls for a grand room, elaborate service, or the prestige signal of a Michelin star, look instead at RyuGin or L'Effervescence. eman is a strong choice for a celebration where the food matters more than the theatre.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at eman?
The rice dishes are the reason to come. Chef Satoru Kobayashi's clams on rice merges a Basque recipe with Fukagawa-meshi style, and the squid-ink paella uses firefly squid rather than a generic substitute. If you want to understand what eman is doing, anchor your meal around the rice courses and use the tapas and char-grilled dishes to fill the gaps.
How far ahead should I book eman?
Booking difficulty is low for a Michelin Plate restaurant in Tokyo — you are unlikely to need weeks of lead time. That said, confirming in advance is sensible given the small-restaurant format typical of Kiyosumi Shirakawa. If you are visiting on a weekend or during peak travel seasons, book a week or two out to avoid any friction.
Is eman good for solo dining?
Yes. The neighbourhood setting and the tasting-forward, multi-part menu format suit solo diners well — you can pace through tapas, rice dishes, and grilled courses without the logistical overhead of a large group order. At ¥¥¥, it is a sensible solo spend for the calibre of cooking on offer.
What are alternatives to eman in Tokyo?
For a higher-stakes Spanish-influenced meal in Tokyo, HOMMAGE offers French-Japanese precision at a comparable or higher price point. If you want to stay within Japanese cuisine and seasonal produce as the primary lens, Florilège or L'Effervescence deliver that at ¥¥¥¥. eman is the call when you want something genuinely cross-cultural at a price that does not require a special-occasion justification.
Is eman good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key special occasion — the Michelin Plate recognition and the deliberate, chef-driven menu give it enough weight to mark a moment. It is priced at ¥¥¥, so it reads as a considered dinner rather than a blow-out celebration. For a more formal or high-ceremony special occasion in Tokyo, RyuGin or Harutaka would set a more dramatic tone.
Location
1 Chome-3-6 Shirakawa, Koto City, Tokyo 135-0021, Japan
Tokyo, Japan
Compare eman
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| eman | Spanish | ¥¥¥ | Easy |
| Harutaka | Sushi | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| RyuGin | Kaiseki, Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| L'Effervescence | French | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| HOMMAGE | Innovtive French, French | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Florilège | French | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Harutaka — Sushi, ¥¥¥¥
- RyuGin — Kaiseki, Japanese, ¥¥¥¥
- L'Effervescence — French, ¥¥¥¥
- HOMMAGE — Innovtive French, French, ¥¥¥¥
- Florilège — French, ¥¥¥
How eman Compares
eman's most direct price-tier peer among the comparison set is Florilège, also at ¥¥¥, which delivers French cooking with strong technical credentials and a well-documented reputation. For a similarly relaxed booking experience at comparable spend, Florilège is the stronger name-recognition choice — but eman offers something Florilège does not: a genuinely specific culinary argument about where Japanese and Spanish food traditions meet. If the cuisine type matters to you, they are not substitutes.
The ¥¥¥¥ comparison venues — Harutaka, RyuGin, L'Effervescence, and HOMMAGE — all operate at a higher price point with correspondingly greater booking difficulty and service investment. RyuGin and Harutaka carry Michelin stars and require significantly more advance planning. If your budget extends to ¥¥¥¥ and you want the full Tokyo fine-dining structure, RyuGin is the clearest recommendation. But you will pay more and book harder for it.
The practical case for eman over the ¥¥¥¥ set is straightforward: easy availability, lower spend, and a cooking style you will not find replicated elsewhere in the comparison group. For a diner who has already done Tokyo's starred circuit and wants something more specific and less operationally demanding, eman is the better next booking. For a first-time visitor prioritising prestige and service depth, the ¥¥¥¥ tier is the more conventional choice.
Recognized By
Explore Tokyo
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