Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
le sputnik
630ptsMichelin star French at mid-tier Tokyo pricing.

About le sputnik
Le sputnik is a Michelin-starred creative French table in Roppongi where Chef Yujiro Takahashi applies Paris-trained technique — fermentation, ageing, patisserie-led plating — to a tasting menu with a clear point of view. At ¥¥¥, it sits a price tier below most Tokyo French peers and delivers consistent OAD recognition. Book three to four weeks ahead: this one is hard to get.
Verdict
Le sputnik earns its Michelin star at a price tier (¥¥¥) that sits one level below most of Tokyo's leading French tables — making it one of the more accessible entries into serious creative French cooking in the city. Chef Yujiro Takahashi's Paris-trained instincts, applied to fermentation, ageing, and patisserie-led plating, produce a tasting menu with a distinct technical identity. If you want avant-garde French cooking in Tokyo without the ¥¥¥¥ commitment of peers like L'Effervescence or Sézanne, le sputnik is the clearest case for booking. Book it now: securing a table is genuinely hard, and the restaurant's OAD ranking has climbed from Recommended (2023) to #366 (2024) to #394 (2025), meaning the audience aware of it keeps growing.
Portrait
The address is Roppongi, but le sputnik doesn't perform for the Roppongi crowd. It operates as a focused, chef-driven room where the menu is the event — a sequence of courses built around processes that most French kitchens treat as background: extended ageing, controlled fermentation, careful extraction. Takahashi spent formative years cooking in Paris, and the menu reflects what he absorbed there, then pulled apart. The cooking isn't nostalgic French; it's French technique used as raw material for something more personal.
What makes the tasting experience worth reading about in structural terms is its movement between registers. The kitchen applies patisserie logic , tuiles, three-dimensional arrangements, precision layering , to savoury courses, so the line between dessert thinking and main-course construction blurs deliberately. A dish of beets with foie gras, arranged into a crimson rose, is the most documented example from the OAD citation: it lands as visual sculpture before it reads as food. That kind of presentation signals a kitchen that has chosen a point of view and is working methodically toward it, course by course.
The arc of a meal here moves from technique-forward early courses , where fermentation and extraction set the register , toward more emotionally direct plates in the middle, then into a dessert section that draws on Takahashi's patisserie background with explicit confidence. Guests who approach the meal as a progression rather than a collection of dishes will get more out of it. The OAD description frames the chef as someone who "ventures into new domains of French cooking" , which is accurate in the sense that the kitchen isn't trying to replicate a Paris archetype. It is doing something more localized and, at its leading, more interesting.
At ¥¥¥, the pricing is positioned below the top tier of Tokyo French. For context, Florilège, ESqUISSE, and Château Restaurant Joël Robuchon all operate at ¥¥¥¥. Le sputnik's price tier is not a proxy for a lesser experience , the Michelin star and consistent OAD recognition from 2023 through 2025 confirm the kitchen is working at a serious level. It is simply a different proposition: tighter, more personal, less ceremonially produced.
Google reviews sit at 4.4 across 244 responses, which for a restaurant of this type and price point reflects genuine satisfaction rather than tourist volume. The majority of guests engaging with it understand what they are booking.
Timing matters here. Dinner runs Tuesday through Sunday (6–11 pm), with lunch service added Wednesday, Saturday, and Sunday (12–3:30 pm). Monday is closed. If you want more flexibility in getting a table, the lunch sessions on Saturday or Sunday give you an additional entry point that dinner-only availability doesn't. That said, both services are competitive to book , treat this like any other Michelin-starred Tokyo tasting menu and plan three to four weeks in advance at minimum.
For explorers tracking the broader shape of ambitious creative French cooking in Japan, le sputnik sits in productive conversation with venues operating in different cities. HAJIME in Osaka and akordu in Nara each represent the same impulse , French or European technique reframed through a distinctly Japanese creative sensibility , though their formats and price points differ. Within Tokyo's French category, L'Effervescence offers more ceremony and a more naturalist ingredient philosophy at a higher price; le sputnik trades that ceremony for a more idiosyncratic creative voice. Which you prefer depends on what you want the meal to do.
The Roppongi location (7 Chome-9-9 Roppongi, Minato City) is accessible by metro and sits within a neighborhood dense with evening dining options, useful if you are building a longer evening around the meal. For a broader view of where le sputnik fits in the city's current dining picture, our full Tokyo restaurants guide covers the competitive set across categories. If you are planning a full trip, the Tokyo hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are useful adjacents.
Ratings & Recognition
- Michelin 1 Star (2024)
- Opinionated About Dining , Leading Restaurants in Japan: #394 (2025), #366 (2024), Recommended (2023)
- Google: 4.4 / 5 (244 reviews)
Booking
Booking difficulty is high. No direct booking link or phone number is confirmed in our data , search for le sputnik on a Japanese reservation platform (Tablecheck or Omakase are the most likely hosts for a venue of this type) or contact via direct inquiry. Plan at least three to four weeks ahead for dinner; lunch on Saturday or Sunday may offer marginally more availability. This is not a walk-in restaurant.
Practical Details
| Detail | Le Sputnik | L'Effervescence | Florilège |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Creative French | French | French |
| Price Tier | ¥¥¥ | ¥¥¥¥ | ¥¥¥¥ |
| Michelin | 1 Star | 2 Stars | 1 Star |
| Lunch Service | Wed, Sat, Sun | Check current hours | Check current hours |
| Dinner Service | Tue–Sun | Tue–Sun | Tue–Sun |
| Booking Difficulty | Hard | Hard | Moderate–Hard |
| OAD 2025 Japan Rank | #394 | Listed | Listed |
Further Afield
If you are planning a broader Japan trip around serious creative French cooking, consider HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa. For French at this level of ambition outside Japan, Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and Les Amis in Singapore offer useful reference points for what Paris-trained technique looks like in different hands.
Compare le sputnik
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| le sputnik | Creative courses channel the free spirit the chef cultivated in Paris. Venturing into new domains of French cooking, le sputnik dives deep into techniques such as such as ageing, fermenting and extracting. Dessert elements such as tuiles find their way into cooking, showcasing the chef’s patisserie experience with intricate recipes and three-dimensional arrangements. Beets with foie gras, arranged into a crimson rose, form an oeuvre of stunning beauty.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Japan Ranked #394 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Japan Ranked #366 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Japan Recommended (2023) | ¥¥¥ | — |
| Harutaka | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| L'Effervescence | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| RyuGin | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| HOMMAGE | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| Crony | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
Comparing your options in Tokyo for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is le sputnik worth the price?
Yes, at ¥¥¥ it sits below most of Tokyo's top French tables while holding a Michelin star and a ranking in Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in Japan. Chef Yujiro Takahashi's techniques — ageing, fermenting, extracting — are applied with patisserie-level precision that justifies the price relative to peers. If you're weighing it against L'Effervescence or RyuGin, le sputnik delivers comparable creative ambition at a lower spend. The value case is strong.
What should a first-timer know about le sputnik?
Booking is the hardest part: there is no confirmed direct website or phone number, so use a Japanese reservation platform such as Tableall or Omakase. The address is 7 Chome-9-9 Roppongi, Minato City — easy to reach but the restaurant does not play to the typical Roppongi nightlife crowd. Tuesday and Thursday are dinner-only; Wednesday, Saturday, and Sunday also offer lunch, which can be a lower-friction entry point. Come focused on the tasting menu; this is not a place to drop in for a single course.
Is the tasting menu worth it at le sputnik?
Based on Michelin's 2024 one-star recognition and consecutive OAD rankings, the tasting menu is the reason to come. Takahashi's Paris background feeds into dishes that run from fermented preparations through to patisserie-influenced desserts, with arrangements described by Michelin as having three-dimensional visual construction. At ¥¥¥, you are paying less than most Tokyo Michelin French rooms for food that OAD placed at #394 nationally in 2025 — a credible return on investment for the format.
Can le sputnik accommodate groups?
Group suitability is not confirmed in available data, and given the chef-driven, focused format, this is unlikely to be a large-party venue. For groups of four or more, check the venue's official channels before assuming availability — the intimate room structure common to this tier of Tokyo French dining typically limits flexibility. Pairs and small groups of three are the safest booking assumption.
What should I wear to le sputnik?
No dress code is specified in our data, but the Michelin star and ¥¥¥ price tier set the expectation: smart dress is the safe default. Roppongi's broader dining scene skews dressed-up after dark, and a chef-driven room of this calibre would not be the place to test a casual look. Business casual or above for dinner; neat casual may work for weekend lunch, but err on the side of dressing up.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 6–11 pm
- Wednesday
- 12–3:30 pm, 6–11 pm
- Thursday
- 6–11 pm
- Friday
- 6–11 pm
- Saturday
- 12–3:30 pm, 6–11 pm
- Sunday
- 12–3:30 pm, 6–11 pm
Recognized By
More restaurants in Tokyo
- SézanneOccupying the seventh floor of the Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Marunouchi, Sézanne earned its first Michelin star within months of opening in July 2021 and now holds three. British chef Daniel Calvert applies French technique to Japanese ingredients, producing a prix-fixe format that Tabelog has recognised with Silver awards every year from 2023 through 2026. It ranked 4th in Asia's 50 Best Restaurants in 2025 and 15th globally in 2024.
- 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.
- FlorilègeFlorilège delivers two Michelin stars and an Asia's 50 Best #17 ranking at a dinner price of ¥22,000 — competitive for Tokyo at this level. Chef Hiroyasu Kawate's plant-forward tasting menus around an open-kitchen counter at Azabudai Hills make this the strongest choice for contemporary French dining in Tokyo if theatrical, produce-led cooking is what you want. Book well in advance; availability is near-impossible at short notice.
- DenDen holds two Michelin stars, a World's 50 Best top-25 Asia ranking, and a Tabelog Silver Award running back to 2017 — and it books out within hours of the two-month reservation window opening. Chef Zaiyu Hasegawa's daily-changing seasonal omakase runs JPY 30,000–39,999 at dinner in a relaxed house-restaurant setting near Gaiemmae. Book by phone only, noon–5 PM JST. Lunch is irregular; plan around dinner.
- 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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