🍣 Tokyo Food Guide
Base: Tokyo (Ikebukuro / West side) Theme: Variety, depth, neighborhood-driven
Dietary Quick Reference
| Restriction | Tokyo Notes |
|---|---|
| No chicken | 2 of 4 — impacts yakitori, some ramen broths, oyakodon |
| No beef | 2 of 4 — impacts wagyu/shabu restaurants, some curry |
| No dairy | 3 of 4 — mostly fine; watch soft serve, some ramen toppings, pastries |
| Ana (no sushi, new to Japanese cuisine) | Kaiten-zushi is the no-pressure entry point; tonkatsu and gyoza are crowd-pleasers |
Sushi — For Jeff, Jeannette, and Matt
Kaiten-Zushi (Conveyor Belt) — Best All-Around Option
Best chain: Sushiro or Kura Sushi
- Budget: ¥1,500–2,500/person for a proper meal
- English tablet ordering at most locations — no Japanese needed
- Fresh, fast, fun
- For Ana: Non-sushi items on the menu include gyoza, edamame, fries, chawanmushi (savory egg custard). A zero-pressure environment to try a piece if she’s curious.
- Location: Sushiro has multiple Tokyo locations. Ikebukuro has good options close to base.
Standing Sushi (Tachinomi Sushi) — Best Value
Stand at the counter, order from the chef directly. Pieces ¥200–500.
- Authentic, fast, no frills
- Where: Uogashi Nihon-ichi (Shibuya / Shinjuku locations), Tsukiji Outer Market stalls
- Best for a quick pre-show dinner (before Blue Note) or a late lunch
Tsukiji Outer Market (築地場外市場)
The inner fish market moved to Toyosu, but the outer market has excellent food stalls.
- Best time: Early — arrive by 9 AM, done by 11 AM before crowds peak
- Fresh tuna on rice, oysters, grilled scallops, tamagoyaki — all ✅ for dietary restrictions
- Ana: Good market atmosphere, non-sushi items everywhere
Ramen — Priority for Everyone
Tokyo is the best city in the world for ramen variety.
Broth Restrictions Guide
| Style | Base | Safe? |
|---|---|---|
| Tonkotsu (豚骨) | Pork bone | ✅ Always safe |
| Tsukemen (つけ麺) | Usually pork/fish | ✅ Usually safe — confirm |
| Shoyu (醤油) | Often chicken + pork | ⚠️ Ask: “niwatori haitte imasu ka?” (does it have chicken?) |
| Miso (味噌) | Varies by shop | ⚠️ Ask to confirm |
| Shio (塩) | Often chicken-based | ⚠️ Ask |
Butter topping: Some shops add butter to finish — ask “bataa nashi” (no butter) if avoiding dairy.
Where to Go
- Fuunji (Shinjuku, near west exit) — famous tsukemen, pork-based ✅, long line but fast-moving
- Ichiran (chain, multiple locations) — solo booths, tonkotsu ✅, flavor-preference ordering form. Great for any group member eating separately.
- Ippudo (chain, premium tonkotsu) — reliable quality throughout Tokyo
Tonkatsu — The Group’s Most Reliable Meal
Breaded, deep-fried pork cutlet. Served with shredded cabbage, rice, miso soup, tonkatsu sauce.
- Restrictions: ✅ All clear — pork only, no dairy
- Budget: ¥1,500–2,500
- Ana pick: The most approachable dish for someone new to Japanese food. Familiar fried pork concept, satisfying, impossible to dislike.
- Where: Maisen (Omotesando — in an old public bathhouse, the gold standard), Butagumi (Nishi-Azabu, premium), any Saboten chain for a reliable budget version
Gyoza — Easy Crowd Pleaser
Pan-fried or boiled dumplings. Usually pork and cabbage.
- Restrictions: ✅ Pork-based at most places
- Where: Gyoza no Ohsho (chain everywhere, cheap and good), any izakaya
Izakaya — Best for Group Evenings
Japanese pub dining — order many small dishes to share, with or without alcohol. Always good non-alcoholic options.
- Restrictions: Wide enough menus that everyone finds something. Mention restrictions to the server.
- Budget: ¥3,000–5,000/person for food
- Best atmosphere:
- Omoide Yokocho (Memory Lane) — Shinjuku, tiny smoky stalls under the tracks ⚠️ mostly yakitori/chicken here though
- Yurakucho under the train tracks — excellent izakaya strip, pork and seafood focused
- Neighborhood izakaya near Nakano Broadway — local, cheap, welcoming
Depachika (デパ地下) — Department Store Basements
Some of the finest prepared food in the world is in Japanese department store basements.
- Best: Isetan Shinjuku (B1/B2), Mitsukoshi Ginza
- What’s there: Sushi counters, Japanese sweets (wagashi), pastries, prepared bento, fresh produce, sake
- Dietary: Japanese wagashi (traditional sweets) are overwhelmingly dairy-free. Western-style pastries are not.
- Great for: Light day lunch assembled from multiple counters, or a special dessert pick-up
- Ana: Excellent browsing experience — visual, fragrant, sample culture
Yakitori — Partial Participation
Most skewers are chicken ⚠️ for 2 people, but every yakitori shop also has:
- Pork belly skewers (豚バラ/buta bara) ✅
- Pork cheek (カシラ/kashira) ✅
- Mushroom, asparagus, ginkgo nut skewers ✅
- Best tactic: Scan the menu for these and order exclusively from them
Blue Note Tokyo — Dinner Pairing
Blue Note is in Minami-Aoyama — one of Tokyo’s best dining neighborhoods.
| Option | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Early dinner before 6:30 PM set | Full meal | Many restaurants, walkable |
| Late dinner after 9 PM set | Relaxed | Ends around 10:30–11 PM |
Nearby restaurants worth knowing: Cicada (Mediterranean, beautiful space), L’AS (standing French — excellent), Gonpachi (atmospheric, the “Kill Bill” restaurant — near Roppongi, 15 min away)
Dairy Traps in Tokyo
More Western influence here than Osaka or Kyoto:
| Trap | Where | Workaround |
|---|---|---|
| Soft serve | Every tourist spot | Skip or find mochi alternatives |
| Ramen butter topping | Mid-range ramen shops | ”Bataa nashi” |
| Coffee drinks | Most chain cafés | ”Soy milk please” — widely available |
| French-style bakeries | Everywhere in Ginza/Omotesando | Check ingredient labels |
Ana’s Gateway Picks (Tokyo)
| Dish | Where | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Tonkatsu | Maisen (Omotesando) | Best intro to Japanese food. Fail-proof. |
| Kaiten-zushi | Sushiro near Ikebukuro | Low pressure, visual, order by tablet |
| Gyoza | Any izakaya or Gyoza no Ohsho | She knows dumplings |
| Ramen | Ichiran | Private booth, point-at-menu, no social pressure |
| Depachika browsing | Isetan Shinjuku | Visual, find something that looks right |
Neighborhood Food Pairings
| Neighborhood | Eat Here |
|---|---|
| Shinjuku | Fuunji ramen or Yurakucho izakaya (under the tracks nearby) |
| Shibuya | Tonkatsu or kaiten-zushi; Depachika at Shibuya Hikarie |
| Ginza | Tsukiji Outer Market (morning), Depachika at Mitsukoshi |
| Asakusa | Street snacks near Senso-ji, melon pan, ningyo-yaki (fish-shaped cake) |
| Nakano Broadway | Neighborhood izakaya after shopping |
| Omotesando/Aoyama | Maisen tonkatsu, then Blue Note area for dinner |
| Odaiba | Eat before going — tourist dining is expensive and mediocre |