Nonono (Yakitori Nonono)
¥¥¥Hand Hospitality's yakitori izakaya in NoMad — chef Daichi Tokuda leads a 70-seat industrial-loft room with skewers and ramen at 118 Madison Avenue.
View restaurant →Charcoal-grilled chicken broken down part by part, salted or tare-glazed, served one skewer at a time.
Hand Hospitality's yakitori izakaya in NoMad — chef Daichi Tokuda leads a 70-seat industrial-loft room with skewers and ramen at 118 Madison Avenue.
View restaurant →A Williamsburg yakitori bar where Japanese owner Noriko Jimbo works the binchōtan grill herself Thursday through Saturday, alongside ramen from Brooklyn Ramen on off nights.
View restaurant →A new Fort Lee Japanese restaurant where 'Chef Kaz' from Japan brings 30+ years of NYC sushi and yakitori expertise to Anderson Ave.
View restaurant →Owner Bobby Munekata's second-floor yakitori bar on West 55th Street — a mind-boggling selection of skewers in a casual, lively setting that has been a Midtown institution for nearly two decades.
View restaurant →The first yakitori restaurant in the United States to earn a Michelin star — seven consecutive stars for this Hell's Kitchen counter, grilling over Kishu binchōtan charcoal.
View restaurant →A Michelin-starred yakitori omakase in NoHo from Yoshiteru Ikegawa — the Tokyo master behind Torishiki — brought to New York as a 17-seat counter with $180 tasting menu.
View restaurant →Chef Atsushi Kono — the man who earned Torishin its Michelin stars — runs his own 14-seat kappo-style yakitori omakase in the Canal Arcade, ranked #23 on North America's 50 Best.
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