My Lunch at Unagi Hitsumabushi Sumiyagura Kyōto Shijō Kawaramachi

My Lunch at Unagi Hitsumabushi Sumiyagura Kyōto Shijō Kawaramachi

I found Sumiyagura right in Shijō Kawaramachi. Hitsumabushi is the way of eating unagi where you split the bowl into parts and eat each differently, and I had long wanted to try this here in Kyoto. Before I had tasted eel at Kamanza in Ninenzaka, but now I really wanted the hitsumabushi way.

Restaurant wall with menu display

I got to my seat and ordered some cold drinks while I looked at the menu.

My Hitsumabushi Lunch at Sumiyagura in Kyoto

Stylish modern cafe interior decor

Two iced coffees on a table

First came the first unagi don, grilled eel right above the rice with thick sauce. It had a smoky burnt smell that filled the nose even before you take the chopsticks. With it there are also miso soup, pickles and wasabi at the side.

The eel was soft and the skin had a little crunch that perfectly goes with good grilled unagi.

Japanese eel rice set with soup

Later came the hitsumabushi served in a round wood box. Hitsumabushi with unagi comes from Nagoya so finding it at Sumiyagura in Kyoto felt cool; they make their kind of it. The eel were cut into smaller parts with small dishes of toppings for the different eating ways.

I had tried hitsumabushi at Okafuji in Nagoya before so tasting it again here is actually an “old experience” for me.

Japanese eel rice set on tray

Japanese eel rice set with side dishes

Here you follow the steps of hitsumabushi where you add toppings and mix everything together. I took some pictures of how to eat the hitsumabushi and would show you later. In fact, there are youtube video from this shop teaching you the correct way to eat hitsumabushi, you could juts search it on the youtube.

Japanese eel rice bowl on table

The menu showed many kinds of eel dishes plus some picks with Omi beef over that. They had a bunch of set meals with noodles and different toppings.

Restaurant menu with beef and eel dishes

Japanese menu with eel dishes

Some pages showed sake from Kyoto, which makes sense because around here there are nearby makers.

Japanese sake menu on wooden table

Japanese sake menu with bottles

The page about hitsumabushi had steps about how to eat it that are good for first-timers.

Japanese menu with food images

Japanese restaurant menu open on table

Upside-down restaurant menu

Extra pages about stone-cooked eel sweets and grilled meat picks.

Menu with grilled meat images

Author

  • Junpei

    Hi, I am Junpei, the owner of JourneyRambler.com! In this blog, I will share my personalized travel experience. This blog will record and share every moment in my journey. Hope you find this blog useful for your travel guidance.

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