The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement
14.5/20

Hanasuki

Updated ,first published

Hanasuki brings Japanese shabu shabu to Chatswood.
1 / 6Hanasuki brings Japanese shabu shabu to Chatswood.Brian Tam
Induction cooktops heat the broth.
2 / 6Induction cooktops heat the broth.Jennifer Soo
A5 Kagoshima wagyu chuck roll set.
3 / 6A5 Kagoshima wagyu chuck roll set.Jennifer Soo.
Sashimi platter.
4 / 6Sashimi platter.Jennifer Soo
Inside the sleek Chatswood restaurant.
5 / 6Inside the sleek Chatswood restaurant.Rohan Venn Photography
Japanese hot pot ready for cooking.
6 / 6Japanese hot pot ready for cooking.Brian Tam
14.5/20

Hanasuki

Japanese$$

Shabu shabu and sukiyaki specialist.

When Hansuki opened it felt like exactly what Sydney was missing: an upscale shabu shabu restaurant, where diners could sate their appetite for platters of premium produce to swish through simmering broth. Who knew?

If it’s your first visit, staff make things easy: choose one of four broths from a handy printout – mushroom, say, or the delicate kombu-based signature – add a cartoonishly bountiful platter of vegetables, then add your “delicious plates”: a selection of wagyu, perhaps, featuring marbled chuck roll, sirloin and knuckle, or a mini seafood platter, with oyster, scallops and prawn paste, which cooks into dumplings in the simmering broth.

Ponzu and sesame sauces are on hand for dipping, and mochi kinchaku are an essential, bursting add-on. The space, dressed in wood and beaten copper, may be minimalist, but this is maximal enjoyment, made for sharing with sake and umeshu on hand, right through to the last swish.

Good to know: Still hungry? Ask a waiter to turn the last of your broth into zousui by adding rice and an egg to the cauldron.

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

Restaurant reviews, news and the hottest openings served to your inbox.

Sign up

Continue this series

North Shore and Northern Beaches
Up next
Baked scallops with miso butter and corn at The Herring Room.
  • Review

The Herring Room

Coastal dining in a welcoming, nostalgic space.

Tartlette of summer greens and fromage blanc.
  • Review

Loulou Bistro Milsons Point

A contemporary homage to French gastronomy.

Previously
Genzo’s neon-lit dining room.
  • Review

Genzo

Channelling the bright neon, flavour and excitement of Tokyo.

See all stories

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement