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    Restaurant in Osaka, Japan

    Oimatsu Hisano

    650pts

    Two Michelin stars. Book through a concierge.

    Oimatsu Hisano, Restaurant in Osaka

    About Oimatsu Hisano

    Oimatsu Hisano jumped from one to two Michelin stars in 2025 and holds a 4.9 Google rating — making it one of Osaka's most compelling kaiseki bookings and one of its hardest to secure. Chef Masamitsu Hisano works within seasonal tradition while adding personal technique, most notably a clay-pot rice course using serpentinite-soil grain. Book two to three months out through a concierge; solo diners and pairs suit the counter format best.

    A 4.9 on Google from 111 reviews and a jump from one Michelin star to two in a single year: Oimatsu Hisano is moving fast, and getting a seat is already close to impossible.

    If you are planning a serious kaiseki meal in Osaka, Oimatsu Hisano belongs at the leading of your shortlist — with the caveat that booking one requires real planning and, in most cases, local connections or a hotel concierge with pull. Chef Masamitsu Hisano earned his second Michelin star in 2025, having held one star in 2024. That kind of upward trajectory at this pace means demand is outrunning supply, and it will only get harder to book from here.

    What the Kaiseki Offers

    The food at Oimatsu Hisano sits firmly within the kaiseki tradition but Hisano is not content to simply preserve it. Seasonality is the framework: appetisers arrive with leaves gathered from the hills, and a slim strip of paper carries a seasonal phrase tied to the time of year. Right now, in the current season, that framing gives the meal an immediate sense of where and when you are eating — which is precisely the point of kaiseki at its most considered. The detail is small but it signals an approach that runs through every course.

    The rice course deserves specific attention. Hisano sources rice grown in serpentinite soil, high in minerals, and cooks it in clay pots. It is seasoned with salt and soy sauce to draw out umami rather than to mask the grain. The scorched rice , served as something closer to a rice cracker , is a technique that plays with texture in a way that is grounded in Japanese culinary tradition but delivered with personality. This is not novelty for its own sake; it is a deliberate extension of a well-understood craft.

    The Counter Experience

    Editorial angle that matters most here is what sitting at the counter adds to the meal. In a kaiseki setting, the counter collapses the distance between kitchen and diner in a way that a private room cannot replicate. You are watching the logic of the meal unfold in real time , the sequencing of seasonal ingredients, the clay pot rice preparation, the presentation choices that connect each course to a broader seasonal idea. For the food-focused traveller, this format rewards attention. You are not just eating; you are reading the chef's argument about what the season means right now.

    Solo diners and pairs are the natural fit for this kind of seating. A counter at a restaurant operating at this level also tends to set the tone for the whole room, so the experience is not purely voyeuristic , it is participatory in the quieter, more respectful sense that Japanese counter dining demands. If you are considering other counter-forward Japanese experiences in the Kansai region, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto offers a comparable intimacy, while akordu in Nara approaches the counter format from a very different culinary tradition.

    How It Compares in Osaka

    Oimatsu Hisano sits in Minamisenba, Chuo Ward , the same central Osaka area that hosts much of the city's serious dining. For the full picture of what is available at this level, see our full Osaka restaurants guide. Within the kaiseki tier specifically, Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama is the most direct peer in terms of tradition and technique, though it comes in at ¥¥¥ versus Oimatsu Hisano's ¥¥¥¥. If your priority is accessing high-level kaiseki with slightly more booking flexibility, Kashiwaya is worth considering first. Taian also sits at ¥¥¥ and runs a kaiseki format , another strong option if the budget is a deciding factor.

    At the ¥¥¥¥ level, the competition shifts: HAJIME and Fujiya 1935 are both Osaka ¥¥¥¥ restaurants, but both work in an innovative French or Franco-Japanese idiom. If you want pure Japanese kaiseki at the leading price tier in Osaka, Oimatsu Hisano is currently the clearest option. La Cime rounds out the ¥¥¥¥ tier with French cooking , excellent, but a different choice entirely.

    For other kaiseki and high-end Japanese options worth knowing about in Osaka, Miyamoto, Yugen, Ajikitcho Bumbuan, and Tenjimbashi Aoki are all worth cross-referencing before you commit.

    Booking and Practical Details

    Reservations: Extremely difficult to secure independently. Work through a luxury hotel concierge in Osaka or a specialist dining reservation service well in advance , ideally two to three months out at minimum. Budget: ¥¥¥¥, placing this firmly in the top tier of Osaka dining spend. Address: 3 Chome-8-1 Minamisenba, Chuo Ward, Osaka. Dress: Smart; Japanese fine dining at this level expects care in presentation even where there is no explicit code stated. Group size: Leading suited to solo diners or pairs, particularly for counter seating. Hours and phone: Not publicly confirmed , confirm directly at the time of reservation. For further context on planning your time in Osaka, see our full Osaka hotels guide, our full Osaka bars guide, and our full Osaka experiences guide.

    Pearl Picks Nearby

    If you are building a broader Japan itinerary around serious dining, these are worth adding to your list: Harutaka in Tokyo for omakase sushi at the leading of its category; Myojaku and Azabu Kadowaki for Japanese fine dining in Tokyo; Goh in Fukuoka for a compelling regional perspective; 1000 in Yokohama; and 6 in Okinawa for something further afield. See also our full Osaka wineries guide for what to drink around your meal.

    Compare Oimatsu Hisano

    Recognized Venues: Oimatsu Hisano and Peers
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    Oimatsu HisanoThe chef interprets the seasons through kaiseki, adding twists and tricks that make the cuisine his own. To express each season, appetisers are accompanied by leaves collected on hill and dale and a slim strip of paper is inscribed with a seasonal phrase. White rice, cooked in clay pots, is specially selected and treated. Rice grown in serpentinite soil, with its rich mineral content, is seasoned with salt and soy sauce to bring out umami and flavour. In a unique touch, scorched rice is served like a rice cracker. The basics of Japanese cuisine are safely guarded, yet imagination has room to run.; Michelin 2 Stars (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2024)¥¥¥¥
    HAJIMEMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best¥¥¥¥
    La CimeMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best¥¥¥¥
    Kashiwaya Osaka SenriyamaMichelin 3 Star¥¥¥
    TaianMichelin 3 Star¥¥¥
    Fujiya 1935Michelin 2 Star¥¥¥¥

    Comparing your options in Osaka for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Oimatsu Hisano good for solo dining?

    Yes, and arguably the format suits solo diners well. Counter seating in a kaiseki setting means you are close to the preparation, and Chef Hisano's approach — where each course is framed with seasonal leaves and inscribed paper — lands differently when you have nothing else to focus on. For solo omakase-style dining in Osaka at the two-Michelin-star tier, this is one of the stronger cases for going alone.

    Does Oimatsu Hisano handle dietary restrictions?

    No specific dietary policy is documented for Oimatsu Hisano, but kaiseki menus are typically fixed and highly composed, making substitutions structurally difficult. If you have serious dietary requirements, communicate them clearly when booking — and book through a hotel concierge or specialist reservation service, since that channel is the most reliable way to reach the restaurant and flag restrictions in advance.

    What should a first-timer know about Oimatsu Hisano?

    The single most important thing: securing a reservation independently is close to impossible. Work through a luxury hotel concierge in Osaka or a specialist dining service. Once you are in, the meal follows kaiseki structure with personal touches from Chef Hisano — seasonal garnishes, clay-pot rice from mineral-rich serpentinite soil, and scorched rice served like a rice cracker. The price range is ¥¥¥¥, so factor that into the evening's budget.

    What should I order at Oimatsu Hisano?

    Oimatsu Hisano runs a kaiseki format, so there is no à la carte menu to choose from — the progression is set by Chef Hisano. The rice course is worth paying attention to: grown in serpentinite soil and seasoned to draw out umami, it is treated as a focal point rather than an afterthought, with scorched rice served separately as a textural finish. Trust the sequence rather than arriving with a specific dish in mind.

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