
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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The best restaurants for omakase in Toronto, curated by TastyPals editors.

Fast answers for diners searching for omakase restaurants in Toronto. These first picks make the occasion easier to compare.

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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The top restaurants for omakase in Toronto include Kaiseki Yu-zen Hashimoto Restaurant, TAKUMI Japanese BBQ North York, Sushi Kaji Restaurant. TastyPals curates these picks based on occasion tags, Google ratings, and editorial judgment.
Kaiseki Yu-zen Hashimoto Restaurant is among the top-rated options for omakase in Toronto, with a 9.8 Google rating and 255 reviews.
TastyPals curates picks based on Google ratings, community reviews, and editorial judgment. Learn how we choose →
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