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Good Food hatGood Food hat16/20Critics' Pick

Garaku

Garaku serves a contemporary kaiseki menu.
1 / 8Garaku serves a contemporary kaiseki menu.Supplied
Charcoal-grilled wagyu with black garlic purée, kombu mushrooms and crisp salsify.
2 / 8Charcoal-grilled wagyu with black garlic purée, kombu mushrooms and crisp salsify.Supplied
You can dine at the bar.
3 / 8You can dine at the bar.Supplied
The menu revolves around seasonal produce.
4 / 8The menu revolves around seasonal produce.Supplied
The menu at Garaku changes constantly.
5 / 8The menu at Garaku changes constantly. Supplied
The kaiseki menu is made up of 12 to 18 courses.
6 / 8The kaiseki menu is made up of 12 to 18 courses.Supplied
The menu includes cocktails and mocktails.
7 / 8The menu includes cocktails and mocktails. Supplied
Garaku is one of numerous dining outlets at Prefecture 48.
8 / 8Garaku is one of numerous dining outlets at Prefecture 48.Flavio Brancaleone
Good Food hatGood Food hat16/20Critics' Pick

Garaku

Japanese$$$$

Kaiseki counter that’s a temple of calm, considered cooking.

With a kitchen led by Derek Kim, who spent almost a decade at Tetsuya’s, you’d expect nothing less than precise plating and refined flavours at Garaku. But then the reality of eating Kim’s food reveals something more: fiercely seasonal cooking that’s artful and intensely thoughtful, but also full of lightness and whimsy.

Take the first course, presented as a Zen garden of snacks, including a miniature tart of Jerusalem artichoke with crunch and intrigue from vanilla and truffle, or a bowl of pink snapper dressed with ponzu jelly. Buttermilk sauce lightens blood-red raw tuna, WA marron is charred and finished with koji butter, and an optional claypot of scorched rice, octopus and ikura brings heft and comfort.

Service is relaxed and confident, Hiroto Yoshizoe’s pixel-panel artwork reflects the flow of the kitchen, and the wine list is full of pleasant surprises. Refreshing stuff.

Good to know: Prefecture 48 offers many more experiences, from cocktails downstairs to omakase upstairs.

Good Food reviews are booked anonymously and paid independently. A restaurant can’t pay for a review or inclusion in the Good Food Guide.

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