Tokyo R Us
Kushibar brings Japanese street food to Belltown.
We sipped our mellow lychee cocktails and munched our gratis curry popcorn and pondered a midcourse correction. Apparently this kushiyaki bar did not excel at kushiyaki. Bummer, since so much of the place’s identity springs from the idea of street food—down to its windowy “indoor sidewalk” dining area, great in warm weather, that stretches along Second Avenue and presents Kushibar’s most authentically casual face.
Yet even a Tokyo virgin could see that kushiyaki wasn’t the only street food on Kushibar’s multifarious menus. The “street style” gyoza—skinny hand-wrapped nuggets filled with savory pork—looked like spent New Year’s poppers and featured greaseless translucent skins, sticky and charred. We gobbled them like bonbons. The “street style” pork fried rice is a version of the unscripted combo of fish guts and pig skin and other unmentionables that generations of Japanese workingmen have thrown together and called dinner. Kushibar’s is leagues tamer—though oily pork might be an unmentionable in the stylish latitudes of Belltown—but comprised of the same kitchen-sink feel, and addictively edible.
Our big bowl of tonkatsu ramen was the fullest flavored I’ve tried in this city—heads up, Boom Noodle—with its chicken and slices of succulent pork and toothsome noodles and sweet corn and scallion rings and sesame seeds and pale moons of halved egg, two fins of deep green nori blowing an ocean breeze across the bowl. For those who request it, co-owner and chef Billy Beach will float a scoop of butter on top to intensify the marrowy richness. “The Japanese use butter in cooking a lot,” he explained with a whiff of defensiveness; he’s been criticized for the Western gesture. “And it does add that sort of American touch.”
Beach himself straddles both cultures. He spent his first two decades in Okinawa, then came West and earned his chops at I Love Sushi and Wasabi Bistro, among other places. A couple years ago he cofounded Umi Sake House—part of the aforementioned izakaya invasion. To speak with the 40-year-old Beach now, you’d never know he was born in Japan. His accent has entirely vanished.
At Kushibar you can just keep ordering as your appetite demands. So my friend and I ordered okonomiyaki, the grilled pancake stuffed with pork and cabbage and drizzled with sauces that you can get all over the streets of Tokyo. A few years ago, the only place in Seattle you could get one of these was a funny little joint in Georgetown called Daimonji; now you can’t swing a sake bottle around here without hitting an okonomiyaki. Kushibar’s version is very thick and pork heavy, and overwhelmingly barbecue flavored. Its bready texture and accessibly Western flavors rank it high on the yum-o-meter. But it tasted like it had been developed during Japan Week at Arby’s.
“This is Japanese food for white people,” concluded my Japanese American companion, and he got no argument from me. Our server laid down the check, and one glance affirmed how perfectly synced up Kushibar’s food is with the zeitgeist of the day: inexpensive, homespun, comforting. Maybe that explains the ascendant popularity of street-style Japanese right now. Yes, Kushibar’s slick neon looks are misaligned with the homely cuisine. But then this is Japanese food for Belltown people.
As I got up to leave I remembered the heavy wooden kushiyaki menu—and left it right where it was.
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Published: January 2009
