
Address and Contact Information
Address: 3020-1100, Hokujo, Hakuba, Kitaazumi District, Nagano 399-9301, Japan
Phone: +81 80-6985-0739
Menu Photos
Order and Reservations
Reservations: tablecheck.com
Photo Gallery
Related Web Results
West Mountain Hakuba | Ikeda-machi Kitaazumi-gun Nagano
West Mountain Hakuba – Wanderlog
West Mountain Hakuba – Trip.com
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Reviews
The sushi was essentially two layers of rice with the tiniest possible smear of fish. The spicy tuna roll was clearly made with canned tuna and the amount of tuna in the sushi was the same size as the cucumber. The prawn in the prawn roll was overcooked and completely lacked any crispiness. The prawn was essentially just batter (please refer to photo 1 and 2 attached). The sukiyaki arrived with about 5–6 thin slices of beef, one lonely piece of tofu and barely any broth. The chicken BBQ was just pieces of chicken with some cabbage (3rd photo).
To add salt to the wound, this place is ridiculously overpriced. I understand that Hakuba comes with a bit of a “snow tax,” but charging 1,600–1,800 yen for four pieces of what they are passing off as sushi is day light robbery. More than happy to pay a premium for quality but this place is clearly targeting tourists who don’t know better.
Posting this as a PSA so others don’t make the same mistake of booking this restaurant based on the 4.3 google review. The 5-star reviews are baffling and honestly hard to believe unless they’ve been paid to lie or they’ve been written by people who have never eaten Japanese food before.
The sushi set was particularly impressive in its restraint: four pieces for $17 AUD, each constructed with an ambitious quantity of rice and a barely detectable amount of came from a can. The rice-to-fish ratio was so skewed it felt almost experimental.
The beef sukiyaki ($49 AUD) followed a similar minimalist philosophy. Five thin slices of beef, a few pieces of cabbage, and none of the depth, richness, or balance that defines the dish. It was less “sukiyaki” and more a conceptual suggestion of one.
Even the miso soup managed to disappoint. At $5, it arrived with a couple of tofu cubes and instant seaweed, offering the comforting flavour profile of warm, salty water. Consistency is important, I suppose.
The mochi dessert was the standout – largely because it clearly wasn’t made in-house, which in itself says more than I need to.
I’m genuinely confused by the number of 5-star reviews. Everyone is entitled to their opinion, but my experience could not have been more different. I walked in thinking, “It’s expensive, but if it’s good, that’s fine.”
It was expensive. That was the most impressive part.
Posting this to save others the time and money. Hakuba has plenty of places that justify the premium. This isn’t one of them.
The sheer depth and richness of taste, the freshness of the food and the beautiful ambience, made it an amazing experience. The wagyu sukiyaki was phenomenal, as was the prawn rolls. Fresh sushi too.
Good food, great friendly service. Bit pricey but you get what you pay for.
The sushi was only passable but seemed like the waitress was also the sushi chef that night -? so not sure if this is normal. I was a bit perturbed to hear that the tuna came from Taiwan – why? surely local is fresher and better ?
The atmosphere is nice as long as there are no extremely loud neighboring groups, which unfortunately we did have.