Restaurant in Kyoto, Japan
Jiki Miyazawa
610ptsMichelin-starred kaiseki without the booking battle.

About Jiki Miyazawa
Jiki Miyazawa holds a Michelin 1 Star and an OAD Top 500 Japan ranking at ¥¥¥ pricing — making it one of the most credible-value kaiseki entries in Kyoto. The kappo counter format keeps the atmosphere engaged rather than ceremonial, and the kitchen's baked sesame tofu is the signature dish to know. Book 4–6 weeks out; concierge assistance recommended for international visitors.
Verdict
Jiki Miyazawa is one of Kyoto's most accessible Michelin-starred kaiseki experiences, and that accessibility is a feature, not a compromise. If you picture a Michelin 1-star kaiseki in Kyoto as a hushed, ceremonial affair requiring a hotel concierge and a three-month lead time, reset that expectation. This is a kappo-style counter restaurant where the food is technically accomplished, the atmosphere is comparatively relaxed, and the price sits at ¥¥¥ rather than the ¥¥¥¥ commanded by most of its starred Kyoto peers. For first-timers navigating Kyoto's kaiseki scene, Jiki Miyazawa is the right entry point — serious cooking, a credible award record, and a format that doesn't require fluency in kaiseki ritual to enjoy.
About Jiki Miyazawa
Jiki Miyazawa sits in Nakagyo Ward at 553-1 Yaoyacho, a central Kyoto address that keeps it within reach of the city's main transport corridors. The restaurant is the original establishment in the Miyazawa chain of kappo restaurants, which means it operates with the confidence of a proven model rather than the anxiety of a single-location gamble. Kappo, as a format, sits between formal kaiseki and casual izakaya: you eat at or near a counter, the kitchen is visible or partially so, and the meal unfolds course by course without the rigid protocol of a tatami kaiseki room. For a first-timer, this matters. The spatial setup at Jiki Miyazawa makes the meal feel engaged rather than ceremonial — you are close to the cooking, and the pacing feels human rather than choreographed.
The menu is built around Chef Masato Miyazawa's approach, which draws on his experience at the ambassador's residence in Poland. That background shows in the layering: dishes are constructed with numerous ingredients, with citrus and tart fruit used to add brightness and lift rather than as garnish. The kitchen's signature is the baked sesame tofu, a dish specific enough to this address that it functions as a reliable anchor for first-timers who want one guaranteed reference point. Rice is served immediately after cooking, which sounds like a minor detail until you've eaten rice that has been held. Soba dishes, when present, use seasonal ingredients. The menu overall reads as careful and considered rather than showy.
The awards record supports the food's credibility without overstating it. Jiki Miyazawa holds a Michelin 1 Star (2024) and appears on the Opinionated About Dining ranking of leading restaurants in Japan, sitting at #440 in 2025 (up from #455 in 2024). OAD rankings are driven by votes from experienced diners and industry professionals, so consistent placement there alongside a Michelin star gives you two independent signals pointing in the same direction. A Google rating of 4.6 across 287 reviews adds a third, more general data point. For a restaurant at ¥¥¥ pricing, that combination of credentials is strong. You are not paying a premium for hype , you are paying a mid-range Kyoto price for a kitchen that has been recognised by three separate credibility systems.
Hours run Tuesday through Monday (closed Wednesday), with lunch from 12:00 to 1:45 pm and dinner from 6:00 to 8:00 pm on all open days. Those are tight windows, particularly on the dinner side, and they reflect a kitchen operating on its own terms rather than accommodating late arrivals. Plan around the schedule rather than against it. Wednesday closures mean that if your Kyoto trip is short, you need to account for that day in your planning.
Booking is hard. A Michelin star at ¥¥¥ pricing in Kyoto creates demand that consistently outpaces a small counter's capacity. If you are coming from outside Japan, book through a concierge service or a third-party Japan reservation platform well in advance , four to six weeks minimum is a reasonable baseline, and more lead time gives you better options across lunch and dinner. Walk-in availability is unlikely. Jiki Miyazawa does not list a website or phone number in the standard booking channels, which adds friction for international visitors and makes advance planning through a local contact or reservation service more important, not optional.
For broader context on eating and staying in Kyoto, see our full Kyoto restaurants guide, our full Kyoto hotels guide, our full Kyoto bars guide, our full Kyoto wineries guide, and our full Kyoto experiences guide. If you are building a Japan itinerary around serious food, also consider HAJIME in Osaka, Harutaka in Tokyo, akordu in Nara, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa. For Tokyo kaiseki specifically, RyuGin and Kanda offer useful points of comparison for the same discipline at different price tiers.
Within Kyoto's own kaiseki tier, the restaurants that come up most often alongside Jiki Miyazawa include Gion Sasaki, Hyotei, Kikunoi Honten, Mizai, and Gion Maruyama. Each occupies a different position on the formality and price spectrum, and the right choice depends on what kind of experience you are optimising for. Jiki Miyazawa's specific value is the combination of a credible award record, a kappo format that lowers the intimidation threshold, and pricing that sits below the top tier , it delivers disproportionate quality for what it costs.
Quick reference: Michelin 1 Star (2024) · OAD #440 Japan (2025) · ¥¥¥ · Closed Wednesdays · Lunch 12–1:45 pm, Dinner 6–8 pm · Hard to book , plan 4–6 weeks out minimum.
How It Compares
See the comparison section below.
Compare Jiki Miyazawa
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jiki Miyazawa | Kaiseki, Japanese | ¥¥¥ | The original establishment of the Miyazawa chain of kappo restaurants. Jiki Miyazawa is best known for its famous baked sesame tofu, accompanied by rice served at its freshest, right after cooking. Other menu items are conceived by the chef, drawing on his experience at the ambassador’s residence in Poland. Each dish is layered with numerous ingredients, brightened by the freshness of citrus and tartness of other fruits. In true gourmet fashion, soba dishes are crafted using seasonal ingredients.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Japan Ranked #440 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Japan Ranked #455 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024) | Hard | — |
| 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 | — |
| Kyo Seika | Chinese | ¥¥¥ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Jiki Miyazawa measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is lunch or dinner better at Jiki Miyazawa?
Lunch is the better entry point. The hours are identical in format (12–1:45 pm versus 6–8 pm), but lunch seatings at Michelin-starred kaiseki venues in Kyoto tend to be easier to book and slightly less pressured in pace. If your priority is value, lunch also typically runs shorter and at a lower price point in this category. Dinner suits those who want a more deliberate, evening-focused meal.
What should I order at Jiki Miyazawa?
The baked sesame tofu is the dish Jiki Miyazawa is known for — it's the one item mentioned explicitly in the restaurant's reputation and worth treating as the anchor of any visit. Beyond that, the menu is chef-driven and seasonal, with dishes built around citrus and fruit acidity and soba using seasonal ingredients. You don't choose the menu here; you follow Masato Miyazawa's lead, which is the format.
Is Jiki Miyazawa worth the price?
At ¥¥¥ with a Michelin star and a consistent OAD ranking (Top 440–455 in Japan across 2024–2025), Jiki Miyazawa sits in the middle tier of Kyoto kaiseki pricing — more accessible than three-star institutions like Kyokaiseki Kichisen, but with verifiable credentials. If you want Michelin-level kaiseki without committing to the top-tier price bracket, it earns its place. Those who want the fullest expression of the format should look higher; those after honest value, book here.
Does Jiki Miyazawa handle dietary restrictions?
No dietary restriction policy is documented for Jiki Miyazawa. Given the kaiseki format — where the menu is set by the chef and built around precise seasonal combinations — significant restrictions are generally difficult to accommodate at this level. check the venue's official channels before booking; a kaiseki counter is not the right format for guests with major dietary limitations unless confirmed in advance.
How far ahead should I book Jiki Miyazawa?
Book at least four to six weeks out for dinner, two to four weeks for lunch. As a Michelin-starred kappo in central Kyoto with a small number of seatings per day (two sessions, roughly 90 minutes each), availability moves fast around peak travel periods in spring and autumn. No online booking link is listed in available data, so pursue the reservation through a hotel concierge or a specialist Japan dining booking service.
Hours
- Monday
- 12–1:45 pm, 6–8 pm
- Tuesday
- 12–1:45 pm, 6–8 pm
- Wednesday
- Closed
- Thursday
- 12–1:45 pm, 6–8 pm
- Friday
- 12–1:45 pm, 6–8 pm
- Saturday
- 12–1:45 pm, 6–8 pm
- Sunday
- 12–1:45 pm, 6–8 pm
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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