Yonaka: Modern Japanese, Even More Modern-er

So, dig on this new restaurant, friends: YONAKA.  It’s been open for less than a month, but already it’s starting to beat out a lion’s share of the hip Japanese-fusion restaurants on the strip by a country mile, in my opinion.  Granted, we are plagued by those paint-by-numbers sushi joints in disguise, two or three to a casino property (hopefully a tide to be turned by the recent Palazzo top-tier sushi announcement), but honestly the quality and downright artistic creativity I’m seeing here is SHOCKING.

The meal starts out with an Amuse-bouche, mine was a little square of edamame tofu with just a dab of yuzu tobiko roe and maldon salt.  The nuttiness of this, I assure you, groves of nut trees would covet.  Nice to see this small but appreciated wink-and-nod to the coming meal can be practiced off-strip without being contrived.  It’s fun, it’s simple, and the creamy/nutty tofu with just that tiniest bit of citrus and fish comes off pitch-perfect.  Hopes, consider yourselves raised.  Looking back, this was going through my mind.

I'd covet this.

A cursory glance at the menu won’t give any real indicator to the food to come, but once you start noticing menu descriptors like “apple chips” and “kafir lime vinaigrette” and “preserved lemon”, one does begin to wonder.  Mainly choosing with my empty stomach, I got the item with two types of fishes (my stomach is not logical…), Konpa: Atlantic Salmon and Hamachi, with yellow bell pepper, almonds, tiny slices of preserved apricot, super thin jalapeno wheels, and almost transparently thin dehydrated tomato chips, all in an orange ponzu.  Whew, that’s quite a list of elements, but it really is a bit of a salad in and around and highlighting some extremely superb fish.  The duo of rich, fatty fish cut into sashimi bits contrasted well with the bright, tangy ponzu (like all their sauces, made in-house), sweet preserved apricot, and surprisingly addictive tomato chips.  Perhaps most surprising was palate of textures presented, making each bite a fun little game of “find the best combo” (although, if that puzzle was solved for me and topped neatly onto the sashimi, I wouldn’t complain…).

Atlantic Salmon and Hamachi hodge-podge salad

Continue reading “Yonaka: Modern Japanese, Even More Modern-er”

KABUTO Up Klose on Wake Up With the Wagners

[imagebrowser id=1723]

In honor of Sushi Master Gen-san,* and Kabuto‘s being featured this morning on Wake Up With the Wagners, we thought a few more tasty snaps were in order…of the best damn sushi in town.

As usual, you’ll have to scroll down to the 30:00 minute mark of the following video (about a quarter of the way in), to hear us expound on the virtues of chirashizushi made the way it is in Tokyo, not Henderson.

KABUTO

5040 Spring Mountain Road #4

Las Vegas, NV 89146

702.676. 1044

Other places (mentioned this morning) where you can find great, classic sushi in Vegas:

I-NABA (which isn’t a sushi restaurant by any means, but whose battera (cured mackerel over sushi rice), is an elegant example of classic, edo-mae sushi)

3120 South Decatur Boulevard

Las Vegas, Nevada 89146

702.220.6060

SEN OF JAPAN

8480 W. Desert Inn #F1

Las Vegas, NV 89117

702.871.7781

BAR MASA

In the Aria Hotel and Casino

SHIBUYA

In the MGM Hotel and Casino

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<

* Who graciously came to the studio at 5:30 am this morning to prepare  the chirashizushi box seen on the program.