Cities/Miami/Sushi/Takato / Oku by Takato
Miami · Sushi · omakase

Takato / Oku by Takato

JapaneseOmakaseJapanese-Korean FusionHotel Dining

Takato at the Conrad Fort Lauderdale Beach is the showcase restaurant of Japan-trained chef Taek 'Taka' Lee, who cut his South Florida teeth at Zuma Miami and Makoto. Within Takato operates Oku by Takato — a 10-seat omakase counter at $250 per guest, using Japan-imported fish and relaunched in 2025 — making it one of the most exclusive Japanese dining experiences in Broward County.

Price
¥¥¥¥
Area
Fort Lauderdale Beach, Broward County
Since
2021
Chef
Taek Lee
Owner
Taek 'Taka' Lee
Takato / Oku by Takato — authentic japanese restaurant in Miami, Fort Lauderdale Beach, Broward County
Plate № 13
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About
Takato opened inside the Conrad Fort Lauderdale Beach with a clear ambition: to bring Michelin-adjacent Japanese dining to Fort Lauderdale's beachfront. Chef Taek 'Taka' Lee, who is of Korean heritage but trained extensively in Japan and built his South Florida reputation at Zuma Miami and Makoto, operates both a full Japanese-Korean fusion restaurant menu and the intimate Oku by Takato omakase counter. Oku, relaunched in 2025 at $250 per guest, seats 10 around a carefully lit counter where Lee and his team serve a progression of Japan-imported fish preparations — toro tartare, uni hotate, foie gras, mushroom soba — that blend classical Japanese technique with Korean sensibility. The Conrad Fort Lauderdale Beach setting provides a luxury hotel context that amplifies the dining experience.
Why it's on Washoku Guide
  • Chef Taka Lee's dual background — Japan training plus leadership at Zuma Miami and Makoto, South Florida's two Japanese dining benchmarks — represents the most impressive Japanese-restaurant resume in Broward County.
  • Oku by Takato's 10-seat omakase at $250, using Japan-imported fish, is the highest per-cover Japanese dining experience available north of Miami.
  • The Conrad Fort Lauderdale Beach setting delivers an ocean-facing luxury environment that elevates an already exceptional omakase into a complete sensory experience.
  • The Japanese-Korean fusion menu at Takato (the main restaurant) provides an accessible alternative to Oku's omakase while still drawing on Chef Lee's Japan-training depth.

Oku by Takato omakase seats are extremely limited and reservations fill quickly; book well in advance via the restaurant website or phone. The main Takato restaurant also serves breakfast and lunch daily. — Format: Omakase counter. Authenticity: Chef Taek 'Taka' Lee trained in Japan and helmed kitchens at Zuma Miami and Makoto (two of South Florida's benchmark Japanese restaurants) before opening his own concept; Oku by Takato uses Japan-imported fish for a 10-seat, $250 omakase experience relaunched in 2025.

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