
Muku (“無垢”), meaning “purity” or “innocence,” is a Japanese restaurant in New York City led by award-winning Chef Manabu Asanuma, whose experience spans acclaimed kitchens in New York, Japan, and Taiwan. Rooted in seasonality, simplicity, and intention, Muku draws inspiration from kaiseki while celebrating goho – the five classical techniques of Japanese cooking: raw, grilled, simmered, steamed, and fried. Each dish is crafted with restraint, using only what enhances the true character of the ingredients, resulting in a focused, expressive cuisine that honors tradition while offering a refined, modern Japanese dining experience.
Address and Contact Information
Address: 412 Greenwich St Penthouse B, New York, NY 10013
Phone: (212) 542-3896
Website: https://www.restaurantmuku.nyc/
Menu Photos
Order and Reservations
Reservations: opentable.com
Related Web Results
muku
Muku – New York – a MICHELIN Guide Restaurant
Muku Restaurant – New York, NY | OpenTable
Reviews
Standard repertoire of Japanese dishes, with the more unique offerings being the fried tempura dish and the ‘hometown’ soba.
Was very surprised to hear that the chef changes menu monthly, which sounds exhausting from a creativity perspective, but mad respect. Looking forward to trying future menus out for sure.
The somm was also 100/10.
Greatness speaks for itself
Muku’s crab, autumn’s most glorious and worthwhile indulgence. And chef Manabu, my best chef, always and forever
Service was thoughtful and knowledgeable (chef interactions added warmth), though pacing can feel deliberate in the small space. Atmosphere is serene and elegant—intimate 10-seat counter, calm vibes like a quiet Japanese inn, perfect for a focused, special-occasion meal.
Overall, I feel it is not good value since this is very expensive tasting menu and you know when they charge double the price for beer.
Service is not bad but I find these places too stuffy especially when server announces each dish behind you which is not the worst thing but some servers are just too close to you and not respecting personal space. I find it best when chef or someone announce and serve dish behind counter since you can look at them while they speak and there is space between you and server.
Ambiance is too bright ala traditional Omakase but I feel a fusion ambiance is best or at least match nice dim lighting with their parent restaurant next door.