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Dining Review: Koki, Capella Hanoi’s New Japanese Dining Experience
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Review: Koki, Capella Hanoi’s New Japanese Dining Experience

Hello, happy cattle! We meet Michelin-starred Japanese chef Junichi Yoshida at Koki, his new teppanyaki restaurant in Capella Hanoi.

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By Matt Cowan Published on Sep 02, 2022, 05:00 AM

Review: Koki, Capella Hanoi’s New Japanese Dining Experience

Hello, happy cattle! We meet Michelin-starred Japanese chef Junichi Yoshida at Koki, his new teppanyaki restaurant in Capella Hanoi.

ISHIGAKI IS HOME to one of the world’s finest cuts of meat that comes from what I now think must be some of the world’s happiest cattle. And the new, truly delightful Japanese restaurant at Capella Hanoi is now their second home. 

I had to search online to find out where Ishigaki was before I dined with the man who put the small Japanese island on the culinary map. To my surprise, I discovered it’s less than 320 kilometers east of Taiwan’s capital, Taipei. Ishigaki is the second largest island and the commercial hub of the small Yaeyama group of islands some 400 kilometers southwest of Okinawa – and 1,900 kilometers from Tokyo.

Meaning: It’s about as far south in Japan as it gets, on the fringes of the North Pacific Ocean. Photos on Okinawa’s official travel website show the island ringed by stunning turquoise coral quays that bug-eyed tourists can view in glass-bottomed boats. This isn’t exactly ranch country. It’s nowhere you’d expect reef and beef.

Chef Junichi Yoshida
Chef Junichi Yoshida

“Mr. Kitauchi himself, the owner of the farm, feeds the cows by hand,” chef Junichi Yoshida tells me via an interpreter the day before the grand opening of Koki, the stunning new Japanese restaurant — no, experience — at Capella Hanoi. “There are just 30 head of cattle on the farm at any given time, so they don’t get stressed during the three years they’re raised.”

Koki’s Private Dining Room, Capella Hanoi
Koki’s Private Dining Room

Chef Yoshida knows his beef. He’s the teppanyaki master who steered his Tokyo restaurant, Ishigaki Yoshida, to its first Michelin star back in 2015. The accolade was also the first-ever given to a teppanyaki restaurant. 

As a result, the chef, with his cherubic face and beaming smile, taught the world that going out for teppanyaki need not be reduced to a sideshow of spinning eggs and slinging dishes, that it can be a proper fine-dining experience that leaves your shirt as clean and freshly pressed when you leave as it was when you walked in.   

Chef Junichi Yoshida
Chef Junichi Yoshida with a guest

“The first thing is the family tree of the cattle,” explains the Tokyo native when I ask what makes Ishigaki beef so good. “It determines 80 percent of the flavor of the beef, including the juiciness.” Indeed, Mr Kitauchi’s website impressively claims his ranch’s premium steak hails from the Tajima line known for its “genes for deliciousness.”

When the following evening arrives, I get to experience just how deliciously those genes have delivered. I’m seated in one of four private teppanyaki rooms at Koki that seat just eight guests when chef Yoshida gently places two heavily marbled slabs of meat, each almost the size of a house brick, on the shiny warm teppan before me and announces: “Tonight, special beef from Okinawa Prefecture!”

After which his wife and maître d’ produces a document with a “nose print” and proclaims: “This is the beef certificate showing the beef’s family tree!” Who can argue with these most Japanese of bona fides?

Yaeyama Beef
Yaeyama Beef

For close to two torturous hours, the blocks of oh-so-rare Japanese beef (flown in directly to the restaurant from Ishigaki and available nowhere else in Vietnam but Capella Hanoi) slowly cook in front of us under the watchful eye of chef Yoshida. Whenever he leaves his station to oversee his staff or prepare another dish, I contemplate breaking every cultural and culinary rule in the book by reaching out and prodding them with my chopsticks, they are that tantalizingly close.

But fortunately I get distracted by the other dishes and the sake (Koki has the most extensive selection of sake in Vietnam) that comes before I get to taste Yoshida san’s teppanyaki.

Firstly, our mouths are gently prepped with a beef consomme jelly with grilled eggplant, salmon roe and an okaki rice cracker, followed by a crispy Hokkaido crab roll that brings a hush over the room, creating an ambiance a world away from the chaotic streets of the Old Quarter above us. 

Spiny Lobster and Juwari Soba at Koki, Capella Hanoi
FROM LEFT: Spiny Lobster; Juwari Soba

We could be in one of those subterranean restaurants at a subway station in the center of Tokyo for all I know. This place is lit.

The sea urchin, also flown in directly from Hokkaido twice a week with the crab, is rich and creamy thanks to the scrambled egg and beluga caviar. There’s also a slow-cooked black Japanese abalone marinated for 72 hours in sake closely followed by a small serving of Juwari soba with abalone liver sauce. 

But really, as delicious as they are, they’re the undercard this evening. As expected, it’s the beef that’s the knockout. It’s perfectly cooked, crimson inside, lightly crisped on the outside and all but dissolves in my mouth with its tenderness and juiciness. 

My teeth are superfluous for this experience.

Yaeyama Cripsy Grill at Koki, Capella Hanoi
Yaeyama Cripsy Grill

It’s also the first time I’ve eaten steak with a dash of wasabi, which gives each portion extra bite and delivers my nasal cavity the hot rush that comes with eating this most pungent of horseradishes. The combination really works.

Oishii desu ka?” chef Yoshida politely enquires about the deliciousness of his steak.

Oishii desu yo!” I reply, drawing on my rusty Japanese language skills from my college days.

The cheerful chef beams back at me in a way that epitomizes the Japanese characters that form the word koki after which this delightful restaurant is named – bright and shiny. 

capellahotels.com/en/capella-hanoi/dining/koki; teppanyaki experiences from VND3,450,000 per person not including beverage, tax or service.

Written By

Matt Cowan

Matt Cowan

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