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    Restaurant in Madrid, Spain

    Sen Omakase

    750pts

    Madrid's most complete Japanese kaiseki format.

    Sen Omakase, Restaurant in Madrid

    About Sen Omakase

    Sen Omakase is Madrid's most complete Japanese kaiseki experience — 35+ courses, a tea ceremony, and a cocktail bar close, all across four purpose-designed spaces in Chamartín. Chef Steven Wu trained in Tokyo and Kyoto, and the OAD Top Europe #348 ranking (2025) confirms this delivers. Book if the full ritual format is what you want; look elsewhere if a deep wine list is the priority.

    Sen Omakase, Madrid: The Verdict

    The most common misconception about Sen Omakase is that it competes with Madrid's progressive European tasting-menu circuit. It does not. This is a kaiseki-format omakase with over 35 courses, a tea ceremony, and a cocktail bar finish — a full evening ritual closer in structure to a high-end experience in Kyoto than anything else currently operating in the Spanish capital. If you are looking for a quick fine-dining dinner, book elsewhere. If you want the most formally structured Japanese meal in Madrid, Sen Omakase is the clear answer.

    Ranked #348 in Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants in Europe (2025), it holds a 4.9 on Google across 113 reviews — a combination that tells you the experience is both credible and consistently delivered. For Madrid, that is a notable position for a Japanese venue in a city whose top-tier dining reputation is built on Spanish and creative European cooking.

    The Space

    The physical design of Sen Omakase is the clearest signal of what you are getting into. The experience moves across four distinct spaces: a garden-style corridor at reception designed to evoke the four seasons of the year, a Japanese dining counter, a dedicated tea room where a traditional ceremony takes place, and a cocktail bar with Japanese pop music. You are not sitting in one room for the evening , the progression between spaces is part of the format, and each has its own atmosphere and purpose.

    For solo diners or pairs, the counter is the seat to request. The progression through spaces means even solo guests are carried through a structured arc, which makes Sen Omakase one of the more considered choices for solo dining at this price tier in Madrid , comparable in format, if not in cuisine, to what you would find at Myojaku in Tokyo or Azabu Kadowaki. Groups looking for a conversational evening should be aware that omakase counter dining by nature focuses attention on the food and the chef; this is not the format for a loud celebration dinner.

    The Food and Drink

    Chef Steven Wu trained in Tokyo and Kyoto, and the menu reflects that background directly. The sole option is the surprise omakase , there is no à la carte, no abbreviated version. The kaiseki structure means the meal follows five traditional preparation and cooking methods, with seasonality of ingredients as the central organising principle. With over 35 courses, the pacing is long; plan for a full evening.

    On the drinks side, the editorial angle worth flagging is that the beverage program at Sen Omakase is built to match the kaiseki format rather than to showcase a conventional wine list. Japanese whisky and cocktails anchor the closing bar section, and the pairing options are designed to complement the sequence of preparations rather than lead independently. If you are expecting a deep European wine list, you will likely be surprised , and possibly disappointed. For guests whose priority is serious wine pairing alongside their tasting menu, venues like Coque or El Celler de Can Roca in Girona offer cellar depth that Sen Omakase does not attempt to replicate. Here, the drinks are integrated into a Japanese hospitality logic , sake, whisky, and cocktails , which is the more coherent choice given the format, and the right expectation to set before you arrive.

    The tea room ceremony is not optional theatre , it is a structural part of the meal. If traditional Japanese tea ceremony is not something you want to engage with, factor that into your decision. For guests who appreciate it, it is one of the details that separates this from other Japanese restaurants in Madrid such as Yugo The Bunker, Ebisu by Kobos, Hotaru Madrid, Ikigai Flor Baja, and Ikigai Velázquez.

    Booking and Timing

    Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which means you do not need to plan months in advance the way you would for DiverXO. That said, given the structured multi-space format and the likely small seat count at a kaiseki counter, booking at least two to three weeks out is sensible for weekend evenings. Weeknight slots will generally be more available. The venue is in Chamartín (northern Madrid), which is worth accounting for if you are staying in the city centre , factor in travel time to and from C. de Sta. María Magdalena, 14.

    For special occasion dinners, the booking window advice is to go further out than you think necessary. The format , multi-room, ceremony-included, 35+ courses , is built for occasions, and the venue's 4.9 Google rating suggests it reliably delivers on that promise. For comparable occasion dining elsewhere in Spain, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria offer different cuisine profiles but comparable investment levels.

    Who Should Book

    Book Sen Omakase if: you want the most complete Japanese kaiseki experience in Madrid, you are comfortable with a full-evening format, and you value spatial design and ritual as part of the meal. It is a strong choice for solo diners, couples marking a significant occasion, and anyone whose primary interest is Japanese culinary tradition rather than European wine depth or Spanish creative cooking.

    Do not book if: you want a shorter dinner, a deep European wine list is your priority, or you find ceremonial structure more constraint than pleasure.

    For further planning, see our full Madrid restaurants guide, Madrid hotels guide, Madrid bars guide, Madrid wineries guide, and Madrid experiences guide.

    Quick reference: Chamartín, Madrid | Japanese kaiseki omakase | €€€€ | 35+ courses | Booking difficulty: Easy | OAD Leading Europe #348 (2025) | 4.9 Google (113 reviews)

    FAQ

    What should I order at Sen Omakase?

    • There is no ordering , the surprise omakase is the only option. Over 35 courses follow the kaiseki format, determined by Chef Steven Wu based on seasonal availability. Go in without expectations for specific dishes and let the sequence unfold.

    Does Sen Omakase handle dietary restrictions?

    • The database does not include confirmed dietary restriction policy. Given the fixed surprise omakase format and 35+ course structure, contact the venue directly before booking if you have allergies or dietary requirements. A fixed kaiseki menu is harder to adapt than à la carte, so raise this early.

    Is Sen Omakase good for solo dining?

    • Yes , the counter format is well suited to solo dining. The multi-space progression through reception, counter, tea room, and cocktail bar gives solo guests a structured arc rather than a static table experience. At €€€€ price range, it is a serious solo splurge, but the format justifies it more than a conventional tasting menu would.

    Is Sen Omakase worth the price?

    • At €€€€, it is worth it if a full Japanese kaiseki ritual , 35+ courses, tea ceremony, cocktail bar , is what you are after. If you want the leading value creative tasting menu in Madrid at this price tier, DSTAgE or Smoked Room offer strong competition. Sen Omakase's OAD #348 Europe ranking (2025) and 4.9 Google rating confirm it delivers at the price point for the right guest.

    What are alternatives to Sen Omakase in Madrid?

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Sen Omakase?

    • The omakase is the only option, so this is really a question about whether the format fits you. At 35+ courses with a kaiseki structure, a tea ceremony, and a cocktail bar close, it is one of the most complete Japanese dining formats available in Spain. Compared to omakase counters in Tokyo such as Myojaku or Azabu Kadowaki, it holds its own on ambition. For Madrid specifically, nothing else replicates this format.

    Is Sen Omakase good for a special occasion?

    • Yes , the multi-room format and ceremonial structure make it one of the more considered special occasion options in Madrid. The tea ceremony and cocktail bar close give the evening a defined arc that most tasting-menu restaurants do not offer. Book three or more weeks in advance for weekend dates. If the occasion calls for a deeper wine program, consider Coque instead.

    Compare Sen Omakase

    Worth the Price? Sen Omakase vs. Peers
    VenuePriceValue
    Sen Omakase€€€€
    DiverXO€€€€
    DSTAgE€€€€
    Smoked Room€€€€
    Paco Roncero€€€€
    Coque€€€€

    How Sen Omakase stacks up against the competition.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Sen Omakase?

    There is no menu to choose from — the surprise omakase is the only option, running to over 35 courses built around seasonal ingredients and five traditional kaiseki preparation methods. Your job is to show up and let Chef Steven Wu, who trained in Tokyo and Kyoto, dictate the sequence. If you need control over what lands in front of you, this format is not the right fit.

    Does Sen Omakase handle dietary restrictions?

    check the venue's official channels before booking — the surprise omakase format with 35+ courses leaves little room for improvisation on the night, so dietary requirements need to be flagged in advance. Given the kaiseki structure and its emphasis on precise seasonal ingredients, significant restrictions may limit what Sen Omakase can accommodate. The safest approach is to raise this at the time of reservation.

    Is Sen Omakase good for solo dining?

    Yes — the Japanese counter is the natural format for a solo diner, and a kaiseki omakase with 35+ courses is well suited to eating alone given the focus and pace required. Ranked #348 in OAD's Top Restaurants in Europe 2025, Sen Omakase is a serious destination worth the solo trip. You will spend the better part of an evening working through the four spaces, so come with time and interest in the format.

    Is Sen Omakase worth the price?

    At €€€€ pricing, Sen Omakase delivers a 35+ course kaiseki experience across four distinct spaces — counter, tea room, garden corridor, and cocktail bar — led by a chef trained in Tokyo and Kyoto. The OAD Europe 2025 ranking at #348 gives external validation that this sits in a competitive tier. If you want a rigorous, tradition-rooted Japanese format in Madrid rather than the city's European avant-garde circuit, the price is justified. For a shorter, less immersive Japanese meal, the spend is harder to defend.

    What are alternatives to Sen Omakase in Madrid?

    For Spanish avant-garde tasting menus at a similar or higher price point, DiverXO is the obvious comparison — three Michelin stars, harder to book, and a completely different format rooted in creative chaos rather than Japanese tradition. DSTAgE offers a more accessible, produce-driven tasting menu with two Michelin stars. If the appeal of Sen Omakase is the immersive, single-format commitment, there is no direct Japanese kaiseki equivalent in Madrid at this level.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Sen Omakase?

    The tasting menu is the only option, so the real question is whether the kaiseki format works for you. At over 35 courses across four spaces including a tea ceremony and cocktail bar finish, this is a full-evening commitment at €€€€ pricing. Chef Steven Wu's OAD Top 400 Europe ranking confirms the kitchen operates at a credible level. If you want a structured, seasonal, tradition-led Japanese experience in Madrid, yes — it is worth it. If you are looking for flexibility or a shorter format, look elsewhere.

    Is Sen Omakase good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and the format is well designed for it — the experience moves through four distinct spaces (a garden corridor, dining counter, tea room, and cocktail bar), which gives the evening a natural arc and sense of occasion. At €€€€ and ranked #348 in OAD Europe 2025, this is a considered choice rather than a safe one, which makes it more memorable for the right person. Avoid it for groups that are not genuinely interested in Japanese kaiseki, as the surprise-only format and full-evening commitment leave little room to disengage.

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