Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
Negima
250ptsHistoric stew, honest price, book soon.

About Negima
Negima holds a 2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand for one very specific reason: its negima-nabe, an Edo-period tuna and spring onion stew reconstructed from historical recipes and served in a Toshima basement at a ¥¥ price point that makes it one of Tokyo's most focused value-for-money dinners. Book 1–2 weeks ahead. Best for dates and special occasions where the story matters as much as the meal.
A Shogunate-Era Stew in Toshima, and a Reason to Book Now
Picture a basement dining room in Toshima, a neighborhood most Tokyo visitors never reach, where a proprietress has spent years reconstructing a dish that predates the Meiji Restoration. The premise sounds academic. The reality earns a 2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand. Negima is worth booking, particularly if you are after something in Tokyo's dining scene that sits entirely outside the omakase-counter circuit and costs a fraction of what that circuit demands at the ¥¥ price point.
The centrepiece is negima-nabe: a tuna and spring onion stew with documented origins in the Edo period, when fatty toro was considered texturally excessive and the stew format was developed specifically to moderate it. What makes Negima's version historically grounded is the deliberate omission of kombu and mirin, both of which are standard in contemporary Japanese hot-pot cooking. Their absence is a deliberate act of fidelity to original recipes, not an oversight. The stew ends with pepper rice, fresh-cooked rice finished in the broth from the pot, seasoned with pepper. For diners accustomed to kaiseki progressions or multi-course tasting formats, this is a tighter, more focused meal — one dish, done with precision, finished with a bowl of rice that makes the whole thing feel complete rather than abrupt.
At the ¥¥ price tier, Negima sits well below the threshold of Tokyo's Michelin-starred dining, but the Bib Gourmand recognition matters here: it signals that the quality-to-price ratio has been verified by the same evaluators who award stars to [RyuGin](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/ryugin) and [Kagurazaka Ishikawa](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/kagurazaka-ishikawa-tokyo-restaurant). You are not trading down by choosing Negima — you are choosing a different category of experience at a price that does not require negotiation with your budget.
Service Philosophy: Personal, Not Performative
The service context here matters for your decision. Negima is proprietress-led, which in practice means the cooking philosophy and the front-of-house disposition come from the same person. That is a different dynamic from the brigade-service model you encounter at venues like [Azabu Kadowaki](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/azabu-kadowaki-tokyo-restaurant) or [Ginza Fukuju](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/ginza-fukuju-tokyo-restaurant). At those restaurants, the service infrastructure is built to anticipate and absorb every guest need before it is expressed. At Negima, the experience is more direct , the attention is genuine but the format is intimate rather than orchestrated. If you measure a meal's success by the precision and layering of formal service, you may find Negima understated. If you measure it by whether the food and the person serving it feel aligned, Negima earns its place.
Google reviewers rate it 4.6 from 59 reviews, a score that reflects consistent satisfaction from a relatively small number of guests , which also tells you something about the restaurant's size and pace. This is not a high-volume operation. The basement location in Kitaotsuka, Toshima City (address: 2 Chome-31-19 B1) reinforces that: you are going somewhere specific, with intention, not stumbling in after a nearby attraction.
Who Should Book Negima
Negima is the right choice for a dinner that feels grounded in something real , historically specific, price-honest, and free of the performance register that can make Tokyo's prestige dining feel like theatre. It works particularly well as a special occasion dinner for two people who want to eat something with a story without paying ¥¥¥¥ prices to do it. It is also a strong recommendation for visitors who have already covered the high-end tier on a longer Japan trip and want contrast: after [Gion Sasaki in Kyoto](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/gion-sasaki-kyoto-restaurant) or [HAJIME in Osaka](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/hajime-osaka-restaurant), a focused, historically-framed hot-pot dinner in a Toshima basement is the kind of counterpoint that stays with you.
It is less suited to large groups, given what the venue data implies about its size, and less suited to guests whose priority is wine pairing, extensive menu choice, or the kind of tableside theatrics that venues like [Jingumae Higuchi](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/jingumae-higuchi-tokyo-restaurant) or [Myojaku](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/myojaku-tokyo-restaurant) can provide.
For a broader picture of where Negima fits in the city's dining options, see our full Tokyo restaurants guide. If you are planning a full itinerary around this trip, our Tokyo hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city at the same level of practical detail. Elsewhere in Japan, Isshisoden Nakamura in Kyoto, Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama in Osaka, akordu in Nara, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa are worth knowing about depending on your itinerary.
Know Before You Go
- Cuisine: Japanese , Edo-period nabe (hot-pot)
- Price range: ¥¥ (accessible; well below Tokyo's Michelin-starred tier)
- Address: 2 Chome-31-19 B1, Kitaotsuka, Toshima City, Tokyo 〒170-0004
- Booking difficulty: Easy , book 1–2 weeks ahead to be safe; the small size means seats fill, but this is not a 3-month-wait venue
- Google rating: 4.6 (59 reviews)
- Award: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024
- Leading for: Date nights, special occasions on a mid-range budget, historically-minded diners
- Group note: Likely better suited to parties of 2–4 given the intimate basement format
- Phone / website: Not publicly listed , book via reservation platform or visit in person
Compare Negima
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Negima in Tokyo?
Negima sits in a category of its own for historically reconstructed Edo-era cooking at ¥¥ pricing with a Michelin Bib Gourmand credential. If you want more contemporary Japanese cuisine at a higher price point, RyuGin or Harutaka are better fits. For French-influenced Tokyo fine dining, L'Effervescence or HOMMAGE are the stronger options. None of them deliver this specific dish format.
Is Negima good for a special occasion?
Yes, but calibrate expectations: the occasion here is intimacy and historical specificity, not ceremony. The proprietress-led format and Bib Gourmand-recognised negima-nabe make it a strong choice for a dinner with meaning, particularly for guests who would find prestige-theatre exhausting. It does not suit celebrations that require tableside spectacle or extended tasting progression.
Does Negima handle dietary restrictions?
The core of the meal is negima-nabe, a tuna and spring onion stew built around a specific historical recipe that uses neither kombu nor mirin, finishing with pepper rice cooked in the broth. The dish is structurally inflexible by design. Anyone with fish allergies or strict dietary requirements should check the venue's official channels before booking, as substitutions would compromise the format.
How far ahead should I book Negima?
The venue is a basement dining room in Toshima with limited covers, and it holds a 2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand, which meaningfully increases demand. Book at minimum two to three weeks out; for weekend evenings, push that to a month. No website or phone number is publicly listed in current records, so reservation access may be through third-party platforms or direct contact once sourced.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Negima?
Negima's format centres on negima-nabe as the main event, closing with pepper rice seasoned in the pot's broth, rather than a conventional multi-course tasting progression. At ¥¥ pricing with a Bib Gourmand recognition, the value case is strong if you are specifically interested in Edo-era cooking. If you want a broad showcase of modern Japanese technique, this is not the format to choose.
Can Negima accommodate groups?
Negima is a small basement restaurant in Toshima, and the proprietress-led, historically focused format suggests limited capacity. Groups larger than four should confirm availability and seating directly before assuming a booking is feasible. Larger private group dinners would be better handled at venues with dedicated private dining infrastructure.
Recognized By
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