
Kaiseki Yu-zen Hashimoto Restaurant
Kaiseki Yu-zen Hashimoto operates inside the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre on Sakura Way in North York, and the setting matters as much as the address.
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Japanese · Omakase
Japanese restaurants in Toronto that work well for omakase — sorted by rating and curated for occasion fit.
Fast answers for diners comparing japanese restaurants for omakase in Toronto.

Kaiseki Yu-zen Hashimoto operates inside the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre on Sakura Way in North York, and the setting matters as much as the address.
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At Leslie and Finch, where North York does most of its living quietly and without fanfare, Takumi Japanese BBQ has built a reputation that runs counter to the usual all-you-can-eat calculus.
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Sushi Kaji on The Queensway in Etobicoke operates on a frequency that Toronto's louder omakase rooms rarely match.
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Yukashi occupies a specific and under-served lane in Toronto's Japanese dining scene: a room where the kaiseki tradition is taken seriously enough that the menu's architecture — its sequence, its restraint, its refusal to compete with th…
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Ichiban Asian All You Can Eat on Yonge Street in North York is playing a specific and largely honest game for the AYCE corridor it occupies.
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Yasu opened on Harbord Street in 2014 as Canada's first dedicated omakase sushi bar, and the founding distinction appears to have shaped everything about how the room operates.
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Michi Sushi occupies a quiet stretch of Willowdale Avenue in North York — not a restaurant row, not a destination strip — which says something about the kind of place it is and the kind of diner it serves.
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Sushi Masaki Saito makes a quiet but pointed argument: that omakase at its most disciplined belongs in Toronto as fully as it belongs in Tokyo or New York.
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Akira Back Restaurant is a japanese restaurant in Toronto that is worth opening when you want a clearer read on the menu and the room.
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Aburi sushi — pressed, then finished with a pass of the blowtorch so the surface caramelizes against the cool rice — is a Vancouver invention that Toronto took its time embracing.
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TOKYO GRILL at North York is a sensible japanese call in North York in Toronto when you want something that usually lands well.
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Shoushin operates out of a twelve-seat counter on Yonge Street in Bedford Park, a neighbourhood that offers no particular culinary theatre — which, by all accounts, suits Chef Jackie Lin's intentions precisely.
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Top Japanese restaurants for omakase in Toronto include Kaiseki Yu-zen Hashimoto Restaurant, TAKUMI Japanese BBQ North York, Sushi Kaji Restaurant. TastyPals curates these based on occasion tags, Google ratings, and editorial judgment.
Yes — Toronto has 12 Japanese restaurants rated highly for omakase. Kaiseki Yu-zen Hashimoto Restaurant is among the top picks with a 9.8 Google rating.
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