Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
Kashiwade no Tsukasa Suikouan
150ptsHigashi-Azabu Counter Kaiseki

About Kashiwade no Tsukasa Suikouan
A Tabelog Award 2026 Bronze winner and member of the Tabelog Japanese Cuisine Tokyo 100, Kashiwade no Tsukasa Suikouan operates from a 14-seat space in Higashi-Azabu, split between a counter and two private rooms. Dinner runs from JPY 40,000 upward, reservation-only across five evenings a week, placing it firmly inside Tokyo's serious kaiseki tier.
Counter Calm in Higashi-Azabu: Tokyo's Quieter Kaiseki Register
Tokyo's premium Japanese cuisine scene divides, broadly, into two modes: the high-visibility addresses in Ginza and Nishi-Azabu that draw international reservation traffic, and a quieter cohort spread across the city's residential pockets, where recognition comes through local critic consensus rather than tourist footfall. Higashi-Azabu sits in the second category. The streets between Akabanebashi and Azabu-Juban stations run through low-rise blocks with little of the commercial density that marks Tokyo's more photographed dining corridors. Kashiwade no Tsukasa Suikouan, on the ground floor of a residential building at 2-14-8 Higashiazabu, sits inside this register — arrived at on foot through a neighbourhood that makes no particular effort to announce itself.
The physical scale sets expectations immediately. Fourteen seats total: eight at the counter, six distributed across private rooms configured for parties of four or six. At the counter, the room is close and deliberate — the kind of space where the quality of silence matters as much as the quality of sound, where the focal point is the preparation in front of you rather than the room's own architecture. This is a spatial language common to Tokyo's most serious Japanese cuisine counters, and Suikouan is positioned squarely within it.
A Venue That Arrived With Credentials Already in Place
Suikouan opened on 7 June 2023, which makes its current standing , a Tabelog Award 2026 Bronze designation and inclusion in the Tabelog Japanese Cuisine Tokyo 100 for 2025 , a significant rate of recognition for a restaurant less than three years old. The Tabelog Award Bronze tier ranks among the platform's most referenced trust signals for Japanese dining, and the Tokyo 100 list operates as a parallel editorial endorsement. Both arriving within two years of opening places the venue in a small cohort of addresses that entered Tokyo's competitive Japanese cuisine market at a level that took peers considerably longer to reach.
At JPY 40,000 to JPY 49,999 per head at listed rates (reviewer-reported averages run JPY 50,000 to JPY 59,999), Suikouan sits at the price point occupied by serious seasonal kaiseki. For comparison, the tier immediately above includes Michelin three-star addresses like Kizan and the kaiseki format of Kawada. Suikouan's Tabelog score of 4.19 places it well above the threshold where Tokyo diners typically consider a reservation worth planning around. Within the broader national context, that same quality tier is represented in formats like Gion Sasaki in Kyoto and HAJIME in Osaka , addresses that have each built sustained critical standing in Japan's most demanding dining markets.
The Sensory Logic of the Room
Tokyo's leading Japanese cuisine counters share a particular atmosphere that is easier to describe in terms of what is absent than what is present: no background music competing for attention, no decorative excess signalling luxury, no theatre for its own sake. The emphasis falls instead on sequence, temperature, and the granular rhythm of a meal that has been structured to move through a specific arc. At Suikouan's eight-seat counter, that arc plays out over an evening session beginning at 19:00 on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays , a single session format that concentrates the kitchen's attention rather than splitting it across seatings.
Wednesday and Friday operate differently, with two sessions: a first at 17:30 and a second at 20:30. The distinction between single-session and double-session evenings is worth noting when booking, as the single-session format on Tue/Thu/Sat typically allows a more open-ended pace, while the two-session structure creates a harder time boundary. The service charge runs 5 to 10 percent, with seasonal variation , a structurally honest arrangement that aligns with how Tokyo's most serious kaiseki addresses handle the gap between fixed menu costs and seasonal ingredient premiums.
The drink program covers sake (nihonshu), shochu, and wine. BYO is permitted, which is a less common arrangement at this price point and gives regular guests the option of bringing bottles they have been holding specifically for the occasion. Private rooms are available for four or six guests and the full venue can be taken for private use for up to 20 people , a function that speaks to the address's use as a setting for business entertainment, which remains a significant driver of kaiseki bookings at this level in Tokyo.
Higashi-Azabu and the Geography of Quiet Seriousness
The neighbourhood context matters for how Suikouan fits into Tokyo's dining geography. Higashi-Azabu does not carry the same automatic associations as Ginza or Roppongi, but the area around Azabu-Juban has long supported a particular kind of local restaurant culture , quieter, less reliant on tourist awareness, and with a clientele that tends to return regularly rather than treat each visit as an event. The five-minute walk from either Azabu-Juban Station on the Toei Oedo and Tokyo Metro Namboku lines, or Akabanebashi Station on the Toei Oedo Line, is direct enough that the address does not impose a logistical burden on first-time visitors.
Comparable addresses in Tokyo's quieter premium tier , venues like Jigen Do and Onarimon Haru , operate on a similar model: residential or semi-residential settings, reservation-only formats, and recognition built through platforms like Tabelog rather than international award circuits. Within this cohort, Suikouan's combination of compact scale, established awards presence, and two-year-old age is a specific signal about the ambition of the project from the outset.
Tokyo's Japanese cuisine dining scene at the JPY 40,000-plus tier is broad enough to support comparison across the country. Those planning itineraries that extend beyond Tokyo might also consider Mitsuyasu in Kyoto, akordu in Nara, Goh in Fukuoka, or Beppu Hirokado in Oita for reference points in the regional Japanese fine dining picture. For a broader view of what Tokyo itself offers at this level, L'Orangerie Koh-An provides an interesting contrast in the French-Japanese register, while 1000 in Yokohama and 6 in Okinawa extend the frame to the wider Kanto and island context.
For those building a fuller picture of Tokyo's dining, drinking, and accommodation options beyond this specific tier, our full Tokyo restaurants guide, Tokyo hotels guide, Tokyo bars guide, Tokyo wineries guide, and Tokyo experiences guide provide category-level context.
Planning Your Visit
Suikouan operates on a reservation-only basis, five evenings per week (closed Monday and Sunday). Bookings can be made online via the venue's website at suikouan-japan.com/en. The cancellation policy is structured and strict: 100 percent of the bill is charged for same-day or prior-day cancellations, 50 percent for cancellations three days out, and 30 percent for cancellations seven days in advance. Reservation changes may be treated as cancellations under the same structure. Credit cards are accepted (Visa, Mastercard, JCB, American Express, Diners), with no electronic money or QR code payment. Coin parking is available adjacent to the venue; the nearest train access is Azabu-Juban Station or Akabanebashi Station, both a five-minute walk. Children may be accommodated with advance consultation.
Quick reference: Reservation-only | JPY 40,000–49,999 dinner (reviewer average JPY 50,000–59,999) | 14 seats (8 counter, 6 private) | Tue/Thu/Sat from 19:00; Wed/Fri two sessions from 17:30 and 20:30 | Closed Mon/Sun | 5-min walk from Azabu-Juban or Akabanebashi stations | suikouan-japan.com/en
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Kashiwade no Tsukasa Suikouan work for a family meal?
At JPY 40,000 to JPY 49,999 per head in one of Tokyo's most serious Japanese cuisine formats, this is not a family dining venue in the conventional sense , children may be accommodated but require advance consultation with the restaurant.
What should I expect atmosphere-wise at Kashiwade no Tsukasa Suikouan?
The room is compact and counter-led, consistent with the atmosphere that Tokyo's Tabelog Award Bronze-tier Japanese cuisine addresses typically favour: close attention to sequence and service, a quiet residential setting in Higashi-Azabu, and a price point (JPY 40,000 upward) that signals the meal is the evening's entire focus rather than one stop among several. Private rooms are available for those who prefer a more enclosed setting.
What do regulars order at Kashiwade no Tsukasa Suikouan?
As a reservation-only Japanese cuisine counter recognised in the Tabelog Japanese Cuisine Tokyo 100, the format here is almost certainly omakase , the kitchen sets the menu rather than the guest selecting individual dishes. At this cuisine category and award tier, regulars do not order from a list; the practical question is less about what to choose and more about communicating dietary restrictions clearly at the time of reservation.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Tokyo
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- SazenkaSazenka is the address for Chinese cuisine in Tokyo at its most technically demanding. Chef Tomoya Kawada's wakon-kansai approach — Japanese seasonal ingredients applied through Chinese culinary technique — has earned consecutive Tabelog Gold Awards from 2019 to 2026, a #71 ranking on the World's 50 Best 2025, and 99 points from La Liste 2026. At JPY 50,000–59,999 per head, it is one of the hardest tables in the city to book and worth the effort.
- NarisawaNarisawa is Tokyo's most credentialled innovative tasting menu restaurant — two Michelin stars, Asia's 50 Best number 12, and a Tabelog Silver award — running at JPY 80,000–99,999 per head. Book for a milestone occasion, confirm vegetarian or vegan needs in advance, and reserve at least two to three months out. With 15 seats and reservation-only access, this is one of Tokyo's hardest tables to secure.
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- MyojakuMyojaku is a 2-Michelin-star, 14-course French-leaning omakase in Nishiazabu holding a 4.47 Tabelog score, Tabelog Silver 2025–2026, and Asia's 50 Best #45 (2025). Chef Hidetoshi Nakamura's water-forward, no-dashi approach shifts meaningfully with the seasons — making timing your reservation as important as getting one. Budget JPY 50,000–59,999 per head plus 10% service charge; reservations only, near-impossible to secure.
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