“Affordable” Omakases in New York

@davidcho
 on 2024.03.25
20 Places
@davidcho
Defining “affordable” here as $80-130…

Sushi Sho

Traditional restaurant · Midtown East

Unreal takeout option

@thesushiguide

Sushi Sho in NYC, by legendary sushi master Keiji Nakazawa. These are the best sushi takeout boxes we've ever seen 🍣🔥

♬ original sound - thesushiguide

Maki Kosaka

Sushi restaurant · Chelsea

Little hand rolls you pick up with the seaweed. Pretty reasonably priced and a decent vibe if you're in the area and need a place to eat.

Omakase Room by Shin

Japanese restaurant · Midtown West

$175 - 14 courses, for fish quality and room a great deal "Two seasonal appetizers — like a summertime grilled eel with buckwheat and a delicate geoduck clam chawanmushi — kick off this medium-length omakase, which quickly moves straight into kampachi nigiri. Chef serves six pieces of nigiri, including buttery Ora King salmon and a tuna block of akami, chutoro, and a toro hand roll. A warm take on nigiri features grilled sea eel accented with a few drops of a thick salty-sweet soy sauce and concludes with an uni hand roll before moving into a geoduck clam miso soup and chef’s signature cloud-like tamago." – FOUND

Hōseki

Restaurant · Midtown East

Kat’s affordable omakase pick - $95

sendo

Sushi restaurant · Midtown West

“The concept: a former Nakazawa chef, Kevin Ngo, goes the affordable sushi route (curated sets of nigiri, handrolls, and kaisendon for $18-$45 per). The counter tallies ten seats.”

DAIGO Sushi Roll Bar

Sushi takeaway · Park Slope

Quick handrolls

Shota omakase

Restaurant · Williamsburg

17 courses $195 and uni tasting

Tokugawa Sushi

Sushi restaurant · Flatiron District

$120 omakase Colin says is best value

Sanyuu West

Sushi restaurant · Chelsea

Sushi Ouji

Japanese restaurant · SoHo

TAKUMI OMAKASE

Japanese restaurant · Lower East Side

matsunori

Sushi restaurant · Lower East Side

"I felt the same eating the $68 omakase at Matsunori in the Lower East Side, a BYOB counter where you book a seat for an hour-ish reservation. Our 8:15 seating was completely sold out, which is common, and explains why these small counters are able to afford such high-quality fish, though I had some initial doubts after my first dish, a confusing appetizer of hamachi sprinkled with actual Frosted Flakes. The next hour or so consisted of an evenly paced succession of delicately garnished lumps of nigiri, one with pickled mustard seeds, another simply with flaky salt or sesame seeds to bring out the fish. Wagyu was sliced and warmed by blowtorch, atomizing smoky fat into the air. Fire always leaves a good impression."