Cities/Paris/Teppanyaki/Aida (愛田)
Paris · Teppanyaki · omakase

Aida (愛田)

JapaneseMichelin 1 StarTeppanyakiOmakase9-Seat Counter7th arr.InvalidesHistoricFirst Michelin JP Restaurant France

Chef-owner Koji Aida opened this historic nine-seat teppanyaki omakase counter in 2005, earning France's first-ever Michelin star for a Japanese restaurant in 2008 — a distinction it continues to hold.

Price
¥¥¥¥
Area
Invalides (7th arr.)
Since
2005
Chef
Koji Aida
Aida (愛田) — authentic japanese restaurant in Paris, Invalides (7th arr.)
Plate № 30
Editorial placeholder
About
Tucked behind a discreet koshi lattice screen in a quiet lane of the 7th arrondissement, Aida is one of Paris's most significant Japanese restaurants by any measure. Chef-owner Koji Aida, who grew up in a traditional ryokan in Niigata and resettled in Paris in 1997, opened Aida in 2005 and was awarded a Michelin star in 2008 — the first Japanese restaurant in France to receive this honour. The nine-seat counter is organized around the teppanyaki grill, where Aida prepares a daily-changing multi-course omakase (currently priced at €280) that marries French ingredients — Brittany lobster, Limousin beef chateaubriand, veal sweetbreads, wild asparagus — with Japanese preparations including sashimi, tempura, and seared teppan techniques. The experience is deliberately intimate: a select few guests watch Aida perform in near silence, engaging all five senses. A curated list of Burgundies and grower Champagnes accompanies the menu.
Why it's on Washoku Guide
  • The first Japanese restaurant in France to earn a Michelin star (2008) — a historic milestone still held today.
  • Only nine seats around the teppanyaki counter means an extraordinarily intimate, exclusive encounter with Chef Koji Aida.
  • The daily-changing menu adapts to each table's preferences, blending French terroir ingredients with Japanese teppan mastery.
  • A wine list focused on Burgundy grand crus and grower Champagnes curated personally by the chef.

Omakase menu priced at €280 per person. Only 9 counter seats per evening. Reservations essential and typically booked well in advance. No restaurant walk-ins accepted.

Links

Other authentic cuisines in Paris

Browse by cuisine in Paris:KaisekiSushiIzakayaYakitori
Keep exploring