Ikagoro
What started as a common fisherman’s dish, ikagoro – squid fried with miso paste, butter, spices and goro (intestine of the squid) – has now become one of Sado’s specialties. It is available at Takeya, a charming restaurant run by an adorable and hospitable husband-wife team. Served with rice, a small dish of pickles and a bowl of miso soup, the ikagoro is prepared on your dining table via a portable cooker. It’s a simple dish with complex flavours, and its gravy goes amazingly well with rice – quite the comfort food, if we do say so ourselves!
Ikagoro – Takeya
1-5-3 Aikawa, Sado-city, Niigata 952-1566
Tel: 0259-74-3328
Ogi Soba
Buckwheat noodles, or ogi soba, are a must-try in Sado for their unique flavour and method of eating. Traditionally made using a stone mill, the buckwheat flour adds a nutty flavour to the noodles. This flavour is enhanced by the accompaniment of tobiuo flying fish broth, which is poured over, not served as a dip for, the noodles. Shichiemon, a 220-year-old soba joint located near Ogi Harbour, serves only one type of hand-cut soba. As each serving is small, you’d likely end up ordering at least three bowls for yourself!
Ogi Soba – Shichiemon
643-1 Ogimachi, Sado-city, Niigata 952-0604
Tel: 0259-86-2046
Burikatsu-don
Located just across the famous Meoto-iwa “Husband and Wife” rock formation, the Meoto-iwa Drive Inn serves up a local dish known as Burikatsu-don (deep-fried yellowtail fish cutlet with rice). Prepared using 100-percent local produce – from the soy sauce to the yellowtail fish and koshihikari rice – Burikatsu-don is a refreshing change from the more popular katsu-don, pork cutlet rice. The special soy sauce that is drizzled over the fish cutlet perfectly complements the latter, which is crispy on the outside and flavourful on the inside.
Burikatsu Don – Meotoiwa kanko
1267-5 Takose, Sado-city, Niigata 952-1209
Tel: 0259-76-2511
Sushi
With no shortage of fresh seafood in Sado all year round, you are bound to come across some genuinely good sushi restaurants throughout the island. Amidst the main shopping area in Sawata lies one such sushi joint: Riki Sushi. What this omakase-style restaurant lacks in space, it more than makes up for in its exceptionally tasty sushi, thanks to the sushi chef’s esoteric knowledge of seafood. Interestingly, not all seafood is served fresh.
The abalone, for example, is boiled for hours until the meat becomes tender. Knowing when each type of seafood has reached its optimum time to be eaten – at its most enhanced texture and flavour – that is truly the mark of a great sushi master.
Sushi – Rikisushi Sawata
112 kawaharadasuwamachi, Sado-city, Niigata 952-1292
Tel: 0259-57-1991
Curry Rice, French and Bread
There is no denying that authenticity would always come up tops, but for these restaurants that dared to defy culinary norms, they bring to Sado a much-welcomed refreshing edge.
A must-visit is Kaifuso Inn at the quaint village of Seki. Inspired by the original curry rice served at the swanky Shiseido Parlour in Ginza, Tokyo, the chef whipped up his own version to inject an element of change into the local palate.
Meanwhile, Restaurant Seisuke, a strictly reservation-only restaurant, serves up a fusion of Italian, French and Japanese cuisines. The chef/owner, who used to own a French restaurant in Sydney, Australia, feels he can better express his creativity in Sado, what with the freedom to experiment with different kinds of fresh ingredients.
Lovers of all-things bread will adore Shima Fumi, a European-style bakery café that offers a plethora of mouthwatering baked goods.
Curry Rice – Kaifuso
428-1 Seki, Sado-city, Niigata 952-2203
Tel: 0259-78-2311
French Restaurant – Seisuke
398 Katabata, Sado-city, Niigata 952-0023
Tel: 0259-27-6850
Bread/Bakery Café – Shima Fumi
105-4 Daisho, Sado-city, Niigata 952-0431
Tel: 0259-55-4545