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    Restaurant in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

    Tenmasa

    430Pearl Points

    Ten seats. One format. Book early.

    Tenmasa, Restaurant in Kuala Lumpur

    About Tenmasa

    Tenmasa is Kuala Lumpur's most focused tempura counter: a 10-seat omakase format at Menara Felda, priced at $$$ and backed by consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025) and a La Liste score of 83.5. Book at least a week ahead. The Hokkaido uni on tempura shiso leaf is the signature, and the kitchen's use of sesame and rice bran oil produces a noticeably lighter crust than most fry counters in the city.

    Tenmasa, Kuala Lumpur: The Verdict

    At the $$$ price tier, Tenmasa is the most focused tempura counter in Kuala Lumpur, and for diners who want a Japanese omakase format built entirely around precision frying, it earns its place. The 10-seat counter at Menara Felda puts you close enough to watch the batter hit the oil, and the progression from appetisers through to seasonal tempura courses is structured enough to feel like a genuine tasting arc rather than a plate-by-plate parade. A Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, plus a La Liste score of 83.5 points in 2025, confirms that its reputation has staying power. Book in advance — this is not a walk-in venue.

    The Tenmasa Experience

    The counter is the whole point here. Ten seats arranged to face the kitchen means every course is served as it comes out of the oil, and the ambient atmosphere at Tenmasa is defined by the focused quiet of a counter restaurant — low conversation, the gentle sound of sizzling batter, and the kind of concentrated attention from the kitchen that only a small-format operation can sustain. This is not a venue for a loud group dinner or a birthday celebration that needs background noise. It works leading for two diners who want to eat carefully and pay attention, or for solo diners who are comfortable eating at a counter and engaging with what's in front of them.

    The omakase format progresses logically: appetisers set the baseline, then tempura courses build through lighter vegetables before moving into seafood, and seasonal specials create variation that changes with what's available. The kitchen uses a blend of sesame and rice bran oil, which produces a noticeably lighter, crisper crust than the heavy coatings you find at mid-range Japanese fry counters. The result is batter that reads as structural rather than dominant , it frames the ingredient rather than replacing it. The signature dish, fresh uni from Hokkaido served on a tempura shiso leaf, is the clearest demonstration of that approach: the shiso provides aromatic contrast, the batter provides texture, and the sea urchin remains the actual subject. That composition tells you what kind of tasting arc Tenmasa is building , ingredient-led, technically precise, with each course serving as evidence for a consistent philosophy rather than a collection of individual showpieces.

    Produce sourcing is Japanese, with seasonal specials pulling from what's available at the high end of the market. For diners who follow Japanese ingredient seasons , the transition from spring vegetables into summer seafood, for example , the timing of a visit can meaningfully affect the menu. The Michelin recognition and La Liste listing both point toward a kitchen that is consistent enough to visit across seasons without significant risk of a poor meal, but going during peak Japanese produce seasons adds a dimension that a mid-year visit in a quiet agricultural period may not replicate.

    The location inside Menara Felda in the KLCC precinct is convenient if you're staying in the city centre or combining dinner with time around Petronas. It is not a neighbourhood-discovery kind of venue , you are coming specifically for the counter, not the street. If you are already building an itinerary around KLCC-area dining, Tenmasa slots in cleanly. If you're making a special trip across the city, the counter format and the focused tempura menu need to be the draw, not the location.

    Booking is moderately difficult. The 10-seat counter fills, and advance reservations are confirmed as necessary in the venue's own guidance. Weekend slots will move faster than weekday evenings, and given the omakase format, there is no flexibility to arrive and simply order a la carte if the counter is full. Plan ahead by at least a week, ideally more for weekend timing.

    For context in the regional tempura category: if you are travelling between cities and want to compare Tenmasa against the format's home market, Mudan Tempura in Taipei and Numata in Osaka represent the Japanese and Taiwanese sides of the same tradition. Tenmasa's double Michelin Plate recognition positions it credibly within that set for a Kuala Lumpur visit, even if the city's dining ecosystem is built differently. For a broader view of where Tenmasa sits within KL's fine dining options, see our full Kuala Lumpur restaurants guide.

    If you are a food-focused traveller building a Malaysia itinerary beyond KL, consider adding Auntie Gaik Lean's Old School Eatery in George Town, Christoph's in Penang, or The Planters at The Danna in Langkawi for stylistic contrast. For Petaling Jaya dining, Lavo and Lavo Gallery is worth a look, and Bee See Heong in Seberang Perai covers a very different price tier. Complete your KL trip planning with our Kuala Lumpur hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide. For a Kedah stay with strong dining attached, The Datai Langkawi is worth planning around.

    Ratings at a Glance

    • Google: 4.8 / 5 (421 reviews)
    • Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025; La Liste Leading Restaurants 2025 (83.5 pts)
    • Price tier: $$$
    • Format: Omakase counter, 10 seats

    Practical Details

    • Address: Menara Felda, Persiaran KLCC, Kuala Lumpur City Centre, 50088 Kuala Lumpur
    • Booking difficulty: Moderate , book at least one week ahead; more for weekends
    • Format: Counter seating, omakase only
    • Leading for: Couples, solo diners, food-focused travellers
    • Less suited to: Large groups, casual drop-in dining

    How It Compares

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Tenmasa?

    • Tenmasa runs an omakase-only format at a 10-seat counter, so there is no a la carte option , you are committing to the full menu progression from the start.
    • At the $$$ price tier, it sits below the $$$$ ceiling of KL's leading tasting-menu restaurants, which makes it a reasonable entry point for Japanese counter dining in the city.
    • Book in advance. The counter fills, and walk-ins are not a reliable strategy.
    • The kitchen uses Japanese produce with seasonal specials, so the menu you eat will reflect what is in season at the time of your visit.

    What should I order at Tenmasa?

    • The omakase format means the kitchen decides the progression, but the signature dish , fresh Hokkaido uni on a tempura shiso leaf , is the one course most clearly demonstrating the kitchen's approach.
    • Seasonal specials within the menu are worth paying attention to; they reflect what the kitchen is prioritising from current Japanese produce.
    • There is no single dish to request outside the set menu, so arrive ready to follow the counter's lead.

    Is Tenmasa good for solo dining?

    • Yes , the 10-seat counter format is well-suited to solo diners. Counter restaurants in the Japanese omakase tradition are built around single-seat engagement with the kitchen, and Tenmasa follows that model.
    • At $$$ pricing, solo dining here is more accessible than the $$$$ options like Dewakan or DC. by Darren Chin.
    • The focused atmosphere , quiet, counter-facing, attentive kitchen , makes it a better solo experience than a large-format dining room.

    What are alternatives to Tenmasa in Kuala Lumpur?

    • For Malaysian tasting menus at a higher price point: Dewakan ($$$$) and Beta ($$$) are the two strongest options.
    • For innovative tasting menus at $$$$: Molina and Ling Long offer different format depth.
    • For French contemporary at $$$$: DC. by Darren Chin is the most structured option in that category.
    • None of these alternatives replicate the tempura counter format , if that is specifically what you want, Tenmasa has no direct competitor in KL at this price tier.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Tenmasa?

    • At $$$ pricing with a Michelin Plate in consecutive years and a La Liste score of 83.5, the tasting menu represents good value relative to the $$$$ options in KL's fine dining tier.
    • The value proposition is strongest for diners who specifically want the tempura omakase format , if you are ambivalent about the cuisine type, a Malaysian tasting menu at Beta (same price tier) may give you broader local context for a similar spend.
    • The seasonal Japanese produce and Hokkaido uni inclusion at this price point would cost considerably more in Tokyo or Osaka, which gives Tenmasa a pricing advantage for the ingredient quality on offer.

    Is Tenmasa worth the price?

    • Yes, with one condition: the format has to work for you. An omakase tempura counter is a specific dining experience, and at $$$ it delivers ingredient quality and technical consistency that the price tier does not always guarantee.
    • Compared to KL's $$$$ tasting menu options, Tenmasa offers a narrower but more focused experience at a lower price point , it is worth it if tempura as a format interests you.
    • The 4.8 Google rating across 421 reviews, combined with consecutive Michelin recognition, suggests that diner satisfaction is high and consistent, which reduces the risk of a disappointing spend.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Tenmasa?

    Book in advance — the counter seats only 10, and it fills. The format is omakase, so you're committing to a set progression of courses from appetisers through tempura and seasonal specials, not ordering à la carte. Tenmasa holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and a La Liste score of 83.5pts, which signals consistent execution, not just a trending opening. Arrive knowing this is a focused, single-cuisine experience rather than a broad Japanese menu.

    What should I order at Tenmasa?

    The omakase menu is the only format, so the ordering decision is made for you. The standout according to the venue's own record is the Hokkaido uni on a tempura shiso leaf — fresh, sweet sea urchin on a lightly battered leaf fried in sesame and rice bran oil. Seafood and vegetables are cooked to order at the counter, so freshness is the whole point. There is no off-menu workaround worth pursuing here.

    Is Tenmasa good for solo dining?

    Yes — this is one of the stronger solo formats in Kuala Lumpur at the $$$ tier. A 10-seat counter facing the kitchen means solo diners are never awkwardly positioned, and the omakase structure removes the social pressure of ordering. The Michelin Plate recognition and La Liste listing (83.5pts, 2025) suggest the kitchen performs consistently regardless of group size. Book early regardless, as single seats disappear alongside pairs.

    What are alternatives to Tenmasa in Kuala Lumpur?

    If you want a broader Japanese omakase rather than a tempura-specific counter, DC. by Darren Chin offers a chef-led tasting format at a comparable price point. For something rooted in Malaysian cuisine with serious culinary credentials, Dewakan is the reference point. Beta sits between local and regional influences and suits diners who want more creative latitude than a single-technique format like Tenmasa provides.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Tenmasa?

    At the $$$ tier, it is worth it if tempura omakase is a format you actually want — the combination of Michelin Plate status, La Liste recognition at 83.5pts, and Japanese-sourced produce (including Hokkaido uni) justifies the price for the right diner. If you are looking for multi-cuisine variety or a more flexible dining structure, the value case weakens. This is specialist cooking, priced accordingly.

    Is Tenmasa worth the price?

    For a dedicated tempura counter in KLCC at the $$$ tier, Tenmasa delivers a credential-backed case: Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, plus a La Liste Top Restaurants score of 83.5pts. The 10-seat format, live counter cooking, and imported Japanese produce — including Hokkaido uni — support the price if the format fits. If you want a wider range of dishes or a more social, flexible environment, the value is harder to defend at this price.

    Location

    Menara Felda, Persiaran KLCC, Kuala Lumpur City Centre, 50088 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

    Compare Tenmasa

    Getting a Table: Tenmasa and Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    TenmasaTempura$$$Moderate
    DewakanMalaysian$$$$Unknown
    BetaMalaysian$$$Unknown
    MolinaInnovative$$$$Unknown
    DC. by Darren ChinFrench Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    Ah Hei Bak Kut TehMalaysian$Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

    Tenmasa sits at $$$ and holds a clear position among KL's tasting-menu restaurants: it is the only tempura counter in the city's recognised fine dining tier, which means it has no direct format competitor. If you are comparing on price and recognition alone, Beta ($$$) is the most natural alternative — it shares the price tier but delivers a Malaysian tasting menu that gives you local culinary context Tenmasa does not attempt. For diners who want to spend $$$ and are undecided on cuisine type, Beta versus Tenmasa comes down to whether you want Japanese precision or Malaysian ingredient storytelling.

    At the $$$$ level, Dewakan, Molina, and DC. by Darren Chin all require a larger spend but offer more elaborate tasting menu architectures and broader course counts. DC. by Darren Chin is the strongest choice if French contemporary technique matters to you; Dewakan if you want the most research-driven Malaysian menu in the city; Molina if innovative cooking with strong produce sourcing is the priority. Ling Long also sits in the innovative $$$$ tier and is worth considering for diners who want creative format experimentation rather than a cuisine-specific counter.

    Tenmasa wins on value-per-recognition-point at the $$$ tier, and it wins on format specificity — no other venue in KL offers a dedicated 10-seat tempura omakase at this price. If you are visiting KL for the first time and want to cover the broadest range of local dining, start with Dewakan or Beta. If you are a returning visitor, or a food-focused traveller who specifically wants Japanese counter dining during a KL trip, Tenmasa is the most coherent choice in its category. Booking difficulty is broadly similar across these venues — none are walk-in operations — but Tenmasa's 10-seat limit makes it the most capacity-constrained of the group.

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