6 Best Restaurants in The Japan Alps and the North Chubu Coast, Japan

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Traditional Japanese ryotei specialize in seasonal delicacies while casual eateries serve delicious home-style cooking and regional dishes. Western fare is easy to come by, especially in larger cities like Kanazawa, which is famed for the local Kaga cuisine.

Kakusho

$$$$ Fodor's choice

This restaurant is famous for its vegetarian shojin ryori (temple food), which it serves up in a 200-year-old building south of the Higashiyama temple area. Set menus change with the seasons and aren't always fully vegetarian; they can include salt-grilled river fish, crispy tempura, handmade soba noodles, or tofu chilled in ice-cold Takayama water. The 12th-generation owner, the English-speaking Sumitake-san, can explain what all the dishes are. You need to book in advance and might want to dress up a bit.

2–98 Baba-machi, Takayama, 506-0838, Japan
0577-32–0174
Known For
  • Shojin ryori
  • In a lovely Edo-period house
  • Garden views
Restaurant Details
Reservations recommended

Something incorrect in this review?

Fujiya Gohonjin

$$$$

This stately building just outside the gates of Zenko-ji combines a bar, lounge, café, and fantastic Italian restaurant. The rather formal modern dining room offers prix-fixe or à la carte options featuring high-quality local ingredients, while the bar and lounge serve up light meals in elegant surroundings and the café is a little more relaxed. There is no formal dress code, but the restaurant is something you'll feel like dressing smartly for.

Kincharyo

$$$$

As the seasons change, so do the menu options at this kaiseki ryori–focused restaurant set in a Meiji-era villa by the Saigawa River. In spring your meal may include hotaru-ika (firefly squid) and iidako (baby octopus) no larger than your thumbnail; in fall expect matsutake mushrooms to make an appearance. Dinner courses can be very expensive, though lunch offers are more affordable way to experience the refined cuisine. Reservations are essential but can be made online in English.

1–8–50 Tera-machi, Kanazawa, 920-8033, Japan
076-243–2121
Known For
  • Sumtptious prix-fixe kaiseki dinner
  • Traditional setting
  • Good sake pairings
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

Something incorrect in this review?

Recommended Fodor's Video

Marui

$$$$

Here you'll find all kinds of fresh fish, some of which are found only in the Sea of Japan. For easy ordering, opt for a set course and ask for a Niigata sake to go with it; nowhere in Japan does sake better. Marui closes during midafternoon. It's one block off the Furumachi arcade.

8–1411 Higashibori-dori, Niigata, 951-8065, Japan
025-228–0101
Known For
  • Dinner sets featuring sushi and grilled fish
  • Superb selection of locally made sake
  • Blackthroat seaperch (nodo-guro), as sashimi or grilled, which is always good in Niigata

Something incorrect in this review?

Restaurant Sakura

$$$$

Seasonal delights like pungent Matsutake mushrooms are packed into the take-out bento (box lunches; from ¥2,000) and more indulgent eat-in courses at this traditional eatery, which has an open-air terrace and a glass-walled interior. A few blocks southwest of Zenko-ji, it's attached to the sake factory and warehouses of the famous distiller Yoshinoya. From 9 to 5 you can tour for free, ending with a sampling of fresh sake.

941 Nishinomon-cho, Nagano, 380-0857, Japan
026-237–5000
Known For
  • Good-value lunch boxes
  • Full kaiseki courses
  • High-quality sake
Restaurant Details
Closed 4th Wed. of each month. Last order for dinner is 8 pm

Something incorrect in this review?

Ryotei Honami

$$$$

On the south bank of the Saigawa River close to the Sakura-bashi Bridge, this refined restaurant serves Kaga specialties. Dinner in a private room overlooking the garden is a splurge but worth it. In traditional Japanese style, the meal finishes with rice, pickles, and soup; in autumn the broth is clear, with herbs and a shrimp dumpling. If you want to experience the food without the high price of dinner, lunch sets start at half the cost of dinner. It's a fancy place, so you'll want to dress up a bit, and you'll need a reservation at least three days ahead.

3–11 Kyokawa-machi, Kanazawa, 921-8032, Japan
076-243–2288
Known For
  • Food served on fine Kutani china and Oribe pottery
  • Refined levels of service (so children under 10 are not allowed)
  • Reservations needed at least three days ahead
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential (3 days in advance)
No children under 10 allowed

Something incorrect in this review?