Have a glance at Toronto’s Michelin list and you’ll find a
host of Japanese restaurants earning stars, including Sushi Masaki Saito who
claimed the city’s only two-star ranking. Give it a year or two, but I sense
the newly opened Kappo Sato will join the list as well.
Like the other contenders, Kappo Sato serves an omakase menu
offered at two price points, $260 and $320, the later includes an additional sashimi
platter and sake steamed fish. Both courses, while delicious, weren’t the
highlight of my meal, so if you have a dainty appetite the $260 option will
leave you satisfied.
With sixteen courses, the $320 omakase left me pleasantly
full. To start, pieces of skinless fried eggplant that were nice and creamy. Although,
it would be even better served warm, especially when topped with cold uni and
caviar. Paired with cubes of sweet poached lobster, the “small” seasonal dish
was wonderfully decadent, just a taste of the things to come.
More uni followed in the appetizer platter. In this
case, the sea urchin mixed with yuba or thin sheets of soy that’s formed
in the tofu making process. The two are a good combination, the silkiness of
the tofu skin glides across the tongue capturing the flavourful savoury gelee
while mixed with the creamy uni. The wasabi adds a spike of spice that’s
surprisingly powerful for the miniscule portion of the condiment.
The cool yuba complimented the hot fried tile fish, a
bite of meaty whitefish with crunchy deep-fried scales. The fish is cooled down
with grated radish and a carefully split snap pea garnishes the dish for
colour.
Sato’s sashimi course is very different, the fish adorned
with other ingredients rather than leaving the seafood plain. The sea eel was
topped with plum paste and tangy sisho flower and the lean 10-day aged
tuna with Japanese mountain yam and egg yolk. Some of it works - like the plum
paste and sisho flower – adding a refreshing element to the fish, others
don’t - like the whipped mountain yam and egg yolk – creating something with
the consistency of slime.
The nyumen or soup course features a bowl of dashi
filled with silky delicious somen noodles. The slice of sea bream was
good, but I found its softness too close to the texture of the noodles and
would have liked a protein that had some bite or crunch.
We’re told what makes kappo cooking different is that the chef cooks in front you, rather than preparing ingredients in a behind-the-scenes kitchen and merely assembling dishes at the counter. The tempura course highlights the concept best as each of the three items were individually fried and presented.
Three condiments - lemon, salt, and ponzu – provides flavour
to the tempura. Don’t worry, you’ll be given instructions on what to use with
each item. We’re told to use the lemon and salt for half of the sweet young
swordfish and then the ponzu for the second half. They should be more
specific on which side of the fish to use each on as the ponzu would
have better masked the slight bitterness of the head, while the lemon and salt would
let the freshness of the body and tail portion shine. Sadly, I swapped the two.
Seasonal vegetables of asparagus and fava beans follow, both just cooked through and paired nicely with the ponzu.
Yet it’s the finisher that really excites, a meaty
raw-in-the-middle scallop wrapped in sisho leaf that’s sweet and
fragrant. It does need to be drained longer so the batter remains crispy, and
I’d suggest sprinkling the salt on (rather than dipping the scallop into the
salt) to avoid having it slide out of the tempura coating.
Kappo Sato sets up the meal with a host of video worthy
shots, the first being the broiled smoked dish where a gleaming dome was filled
with smoke and the cover removed table side. Despite all the fume, the flavours
just singed the fish with a smoky essence, the centre of bonito and tuna
still tasted neutral.
We’re told the tuna is a lean variety, but it’s so nicely
marbled that it can match any otoro, flooding my mouth with a sweet
richness. Crispy arrow root chips are given to help cleanse the palette but
could easily make for an addictive tv-side snack.
Like the sashimi, Sato’s sushi were beautiful flavourful
bites, the bluefish topped with shallot, scallion, and wasabi with the rice nicely
warmed. Personally, I would tone down shallot as it was a tad pungent for the
fish, nonetheless it was still tasty.
The saba hand roll was served taco style, the rice
and fish sandwiched between sisho and crispy seaweed. Another
inventively flavourful dish that’s different from what you’d normally receive.
It’d be even better if there was a bit of glaze put onto the mackerel.
Sitting in a sweetened vinegar, the mozuku seaweed was
silky and reminded me of fat choi but milder and more delicate. It made
for a refreshing palette cleanser before the richer grilled unagi, which
was lightly brushed with a sweet and savoury glaze. Slightly crispy around the
edges, the freshwater eel went nicely with the sansho pepper leaf and wasabi.
If there was any alcohol used in the sake-steamed red
snapper it must have evaporated in the cooking process as there wasn’t much
flavour to the fish and napa cabbage. Hence, the dish really relied on the house-made
ponzu dipping sauce. I like the concept of the dish, but it could have
been pulled out of the oven earlier as the fish was a tad overdone.
Two types of tofu follow, the first featured in the cold
dish and made with sesame so it had a rich nutty essence. The addition of Sakura,
mushroom, and dried shrimp makes for a fragrant bite, although I did find
the dried shrimp a bit overpowering with the tofu.
The second traditional soy tofu sat under a mound of lightly
cooked wagyu in a beef consommé. I normally love wagyu but being poached
in broth doesn’t do it justice as everything merely tastes oily. My friend
described it best as saying it’s like having a non-crispy bacon soup. Should
they want to keep it in slices, rolling the beef around asparagus, enoki, or
white chives would have been a better choice.
I kept eyeing the copper domes sitting on cooking elements
by our counter. Its contents were finally revealed in our last savoury course
as the seafood pot-cooked rice. Just close your eyes and inhale as the cover is
lifted as the sweet seafood aroma of cooked crustaceans is so intoxicating.
Cooked with dashi the sticky rice became fluffy but still firm, almost like a drier risotto. Studded with clams, rehydrated shrimp, and fish the rice was already teeming with seafood essence but made even richer with a generous portion of ikura (salmon roe). At Kappo Sato you won’t leave hungry because a second helping of rice is available and offered. This was all washed down with a hot mild miso soup.
Just save room for dessert as all three courses were
delicious. Firstly, a slice of musk melon that’s so sweet and refreshing. Its
sweetness is contrasted by a glass of hot tea that’s so wonderful to sip on
after a filling meal.
All the while, an ice cream machine sits on the counter whirling around and holding the second dessert, a freshly made soymilk ice cream. The cold soft serve was paired with azuki bean paste and a matcha shortbread cookie. While there’s a light sweetness to the dish, we’re given a tiny vessel of brown sugar syrup to add to the soymilk dessert to our liking. Use it, I love how it enhanced the bean and ice cream’s flavours.
To end, a strawberry daifuku that’s a mound of azuki
with sweet strawberry pieces topped with a delicate sheet of soft mochi.
Savour the single kuromame, a sweet black soybean, topping to daifuku
that breaks apart to reveal a smooth beany centre. It’s served with another matcha
tea, this time light and frothy so there’s a latte quality to the drink
minus the dairy.
Aside from his culinary training, Chef Takeshi Sato achieved
other accomplishments including being a sake sommelier and qualified to prepare
a Japanese tea ceremony – hence the final two cups of matcha served with
dessert. He jokingly says he loves drinking, another common theme that seems to
run through the upscale Japanese chefs of Toronto.
Chef Sato leads an all-female kitchen brigade who artfully
creates and plates the dishes. Takeshi has decades of cooking experience from
working in a Michelin restaurant in Tokyo, helming Toronto’s Zen restaurant, and
most recently being the official chef of the Japanese Consulate General in
Toronto. Now it’s his turn to be an owner of a restaurant in his name, when
will his star come?
Address: 575 Mount Pleasant Road
____________________________
Gastro World's Grading System
- Anything under 5 - I really disliked and will never go back
- 6 - decent restaurant but I likely won't return
- 7 - decent restaurant and I will likely return
- 8 - great restaurant that I'd be happy to recommend
- 9 - fantastic restaurant that I would love to visit regularly and highly recommend
- 10 - absolute perfection!
Is That It? I Want More!
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